Philippine Daily Inquirer

IS PH TOO OBSESSED WITH SCORECARDS, BDO’S TAN ASKS

- —DORIS DUMLAO-ABADILLA

Veteran banker Nestor Tan, the 2019 MAP “Management Man of the Year” awardee, yesterday urged the business community to rethink whether the western standards for corporate governance and fair competitio­n suited the local market.

“We all accept that governance is important, frankly, indispensa­ble for sound management, however, the adherence to global standards has taken on a turn toward compliance to global prescripti­ons,” Tan said, citing universal principles of fairness, integrity, accountabi­lity and transparen­cy.

“But universal prescripti­ons may not apply to all markets. Worse, we may even get addicted to scorecards and awards [that are] mostly based on checklist against generic prescripti­ons,” said Tan, the president and chief executive of the country’s largest lender, BDO Unibank.

In developed economies where corporate ownership is dispersed, for instance, Tan said having independen­t directors was a good way to create proper checks-and-balance and temper management and management nominated directors.

“In our environmen­t, we forget that majority shareholde­rs share the same desire to ensure management propriety. We place too much reliance and burden on independen­t shareholde­rs at the expense of majority shareholde­rs,” said Tan.

“Let’s focus on the output, not on who’s doing the work,” he said, noting that independen­t directors and majority directors actually shared the same objectives.

Tan also posed the question on whether the principles of fair competitio­n as adopted locally were considered boon or bane to the economy.

“I would venture to say that the US and European models may not be the best for a country like ours. Should we follow more the Korean model where they nurture national champions in different industries so they can compete regionally or globally? Besides, how do you define proper competitiv­e landscape? It is local, national, regional or global? I would say that in the banking industry, it’s all of those, but we should be cognizant that everybody is in a global playing field,” he said.

Tan said western practices often tilted toward the achievemen­t of short-term gains, rather than value creation. He noted a saying in New York that it’s mostly people who ride the subway who tell the people who ride the limousines what to do—meaning it’s the analysts and investors who tell the CEOS what to do.

“Much emphasis has been placed on quarterly profits and share gains but not enough on long term investment­s, market share or franchise growth,” Tan said.

On the other hand, Asian investors, primarily family business owners, tend to look at improving the value of the business for the next generation, he said. “In Asia, majority of shareholde­rs are brands that have withstood several generation­s. Let’s not lose sight of those values.”

The Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (MAP) honored Tan for “steering BDO to being concisely ranked by the global financial community as among the best-managed banks in the Philippine­s,” among others.

 ??  ?? Nestor Tan
Nestor Tan

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