Cape Times

Carillion executives may be banned

- Andrew MacAskill

THE BOSSES of collapsed British constructi­on firm Carillion should face an inquiry into their fitness to serve as directors after they masked the company’s financial ill-health with accounting tricks before its failure, British Members of Parliament said yesterday.

Carillion, which employed 43 000 people to provide services in defence, education, health and transport, collapsed in January, becoming the largest constructi­on bankruptcy in British history. It left creditors and the firm’s pensioners facing steep losses and put thousands of jobs at risk.

The executives were more concerned with protecting bonuses than finding problems at the firm and presided over a “rotten corporate culture” that led to its costly demise, an investigat­ion by two parliament­ary committees found.

The failure of Carillion was a story of “recklessne­ss, hubris and greed” and could happen again, a 101-page report by the Work and Pensions committee and the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy select committee said.

“Same old story. Same old greed. A board of directors too busy stuffing their mouths with gold to show any concern for the welfare of their workforce or their pensioners,” said Frank Field, who chairs the Work and Pensions select committee. “British industry is too important to be left in the hands of the likes of the shysters at the top of Carillion,” he added.

Investigat­ion

The Insolvency Service, which is conducting an investigat­ion into potential misconduct by former directors at Carillion, should carefully consider whether the executives should be banned, the report said.

Former finance director Richard Adam was the architect of Carillion’s aggressive accounting policies and refused to make adequate contributi­ons to the company’s pension scheme, which he considered a “waste of money”, the report said.

Carillion misreprese­nted its accounts, for example, by leaning on small suppliers to delay receiving payment in an attempt to conceal the true scale of its debts, the report said.

The company kept some companies waiting to be paid for 120 days unless, in exchange for more prompt payments, the companies would accept a discount on their invoices, the report said. This meant that Carillion was effectivel­y able to keep more cash on its books by holding on to money owed to suppliers.

‘The mystery is not that it collapsed, but that it lasted so long. Carillion could happen again, and soon.’

Adam’s decision to sell almost £800 000 (R13.5 million) in shares after he retired last year, a few months before Carillion collapsed, were “the actions of a man who knew where the company was heading”, the report said.

In a statement, Adam rejected the committee’s conclusion­s. He said the reasons for Carillion’s collapse were complex and that the authors of the report wrongly attributed quotes to him.

Break-up

The report said the government should also ask the competitio­n commission to investigat­e the break-up of Britain’s big four accountanc­y firms after a series of scandals that accountant­s appear to have missed.

The aim would be to increase competitio­n and eliminate conflicts of interest arising from the dominance of the largest accountanc­y firms.

The government needed to do more to tackle the regulatory and legal environmen­t that allowed Carillion to become a “giant and unsustaina­ble corporate time bomb”, the report said.

“Carillion was unsustaina­ble,” it added. “The mystery is not that it collapsed, but that it lasted so long. Carillion could happen again, and soon.” – Reuters

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