Raise Awareness Of The Value Of Strong Corporate Governance
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Distinguished guests, fellow accountants, and
colleagues. It is truly a privilege to participate in your Congress and to
speak on this very important topic of good corporate governance. I am making
this presentation on behalf of René Ricol, IFAC’s President, who regrets that
an unavoidable conflict prevents him from being with you today. During his
tenure as IFAC President, Mr. Ricol has worked to raise awareness of the value
of strong corporate governance and he applauds your efforts to make this a
focus of your Congress.
I am particularly pleased to be with you for this
Congress, as it is the first of your Congresses since the IFAC Board
acknowledged the Association of Accountancy Bodies of West Africa as a regional
grouping, so it is a special pleasure to be able to welcome ABWA to membership
of the IFAC ”family”. I would also like to acknowledge the contribution that
two of the IFAC Board members, Ndung’u Gathinji of Kenya and Ignatius Sehoole
of South Africa, have made significant contributions in the process of
acheiving this acknowledgement for ABWA. IFAC sees its regional groupings and
regional organisations as an increasingly important element of the IFAC
structure and would encourage the strengthening and expansion of these
networks.
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As I turn to my theme of corporate governance, I would
note that while my presentation today focuses on corporate governance in the
private sector, the need for sound governance arrangements in the public sector
are also critically important. As the former Vice-President and Controller of
the World Bank, Jules Muis, has observed, an economy can be likened to an
aeroplane – both wings must be sound for it to fly safely. For an economy to
grow and develop, its governance structures in both the public and private
sectors must be solid. I should also note that the need for the governance of
the public sector to be sound was recognised by the Eastern Southern and
Central African Federation of Accountants a number of years ago when they urged
the Public Sector Committee of IFAC to produce its document ”insert”.
Sound corporate governance is, of course, critical to
capital market development in West Africa, in other emerging economies and
around the globe. Effective corporate governance can create safeguards against
corruption and mismanagement and promote transparency, and therefore
efficiency, in economic affairs. It is at the heart of building confidence in
financial systems and that is at the heart of sustainable economic growth.
At one level it is that simple – if sustainable
economic growth is the goal, good corporate governance is essential.
As professional accountants, we understand that while
corporate governance is a concept that is presently making the headlines, it is
also much more than that. Corporate governance is about actions and behaviors
-- actions and behaviors that need to be taken by private and public
enterprises, that need to be reinforced by governments, and that must be
supported by professional accountants and all those involved in the development
and disclosure of financial information. Good corporate governance hinges on a
number of elements such as principles, values, laws, rules, regulations, and
institutions. I will touch on some of this today as I seek, first, to provide
you with an understanding of good governance from the perspective of the
International Federation of Accountants and, second, describe the role we can
all play in enhancing corporate governance practices.
First, I’d like you to take a look back with me to the
not too distant past, to nearly two- and-a-half years ago when the U.S. energy
giant Enron collapsed. Back in 2001, many blamed the Enron failure almost
exclusively on the auditors. Corporate governance was not yet seen as so
central to the corporate failures. Few understood the depth of the problems. In
fact, some predicted that Enron was a storm that would soon blow over. Time has
shown that rather than being an isolated event, Enron was the leading edge of a
storm front. In fact, ”Enron” has become global shorthand for corporate greed
and failed corporate governance. WorldCom, Tyco, Adelphia, Ahold, Vivendi and
most recently Parmalat have all followed, each new case tending to reinforce
public cynicism towards business in general. Reversing this trend, restoring
and improving public confidence in capital markets, in financial reporting and
in the accounting profession is the end game of the strategy I will present to
you today.
There are many of you who, like me, recall financial
failures in previous decades. Scandals involving companies like BCCI, Baring,
Sunbeam and Credit Lyonnaise. What has changed? Well, the world has changed
since the 1980s and 1990s. More and more people have a stake in the performance
and conduct of public companies, through stocks, mutual funds and pension
plans. Investing in public companies has in many countries become an activity
open to anyone with a computer and a relatively few dollars. This has greatly
increased the political salience of capital market performance.
As well, the globalization of business and communications,
increasing technology and increasingly complex financial transactions, mean
that a business failure anywhere touches people everywhere. A failure in London
impacts the markets in Lagos. This is why a recent survey of business leaders
by the Economist Intelligence Unit found that the attention being paid to
corporate governance is increasing worldwide and will continue to do so into
the future.
Some of those behind the scandals of the past two
years were accountants. However, they were not the only ones to blame. In fact,
thousands of accountants like those of you sitting in this room today are
dedicated to providing quality work and to putting your integrity ahead of
short-term commercial interests. Nonetheless, the scandals created a ripple
effect for our profession -- accountants who fail in London negatively affect
the trust and reputation of accountants in Lagos, and vice versa.
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To be sure, some of the criticism concerning auditors
and their role in these failures has been fair. Some of it was not. Part of our
job, as trained professionals, has been to see what we could learn from the
events. I want now to talk about some elements of IFAC’s response to these
events, focusing on those related to corporate governance.
IFAC took the approach of addressing this challenge on
two levels: focusing on improving the role of accountants in the governance and
financial reporting chain, and developing a plan of action to improve corporate
governance as a whole. We recognized that enhancing public trust through our
commitment to the highest standards of quality and integrity required real
action as well as the ability to effectively communicate that action to all of
our stakeholders, including the public.
While these corporate failures have placed the
accounting profession under unparalleled scrutiny, they have also provided us
with unparalled opportunity to effect reform and change. Obstacles to enhancing
professional standards of quality, integrity and independence have melted away.
In a sense, Enron and its cousins compelled us to take a hard look at our core
values. What we have relearned is that our profession is built on public trust.
It’s all we have. But it’s an awful lot. It’s what keeps the markets working. In
order for the public to have confidence in the quality and integrity of our
work, we need to earn their trust every day.
With 158 member organizations in 118 countries,
representing 2.5 million accountants worldwide, IFAC is ideally placed to
effect change, and we have seized the opportunity. Accountants play a key role
in the value creation chain, in which one link is good corporate governance.
Our analysis illustrates very clearly the connection between business failure
and reporting failure. The two go hand in hand.
Even before Enron collapsed, IFAC had issued a robust
new principles-based standard on independence for public accountants as part of
the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants. This framework is the most
rigorous international guidance ever issued, and its principles and guidance
are being adopted by a growing number of national accounting and auditing
standard-setting bodies.
At the same time, we welcome oversight of the
profession. For most of our national organizations, this means the acceptance
of some external oversight mechanism or process. Internationally, IFAC
undertook a wide-ranging consultative process that resulted in a series of
reforms, unanimously supported by international regulators and approved by
IFAC’s Council last November. This initiative also received the endorsement of
the Financial Stability Forum.These reforms, currently being implemented,
include the establishment of a Public Interest Oversight Board to oversee
IFAC’s standard-setting and compliance regimes, as well as increased
transparency and public participation in governance and standard-setting
activities.
The end result of these reforms is that IFAC has moved
from a self-regulatory framework to a mixed or shared regulatory structure.
We have also focused on developing a more transparent
standard-setting process for the International Auditing and Assurance Standards
Board (IAASB) as well as for the Education Committee and the Ethics Committee.
The IAASB meetings are open to the public, and its papers are posted on the
IFAC website. We have increased technical support to the IAASB in order to
channel energies in areas that most seriously touch on the public interest. In
the past few months, the IAASB has released two new quality control standards.
One establishes a firm’s responsibilities to set up and maintain a system of
quality contrl for all audits and assurance engagements. The second establishes
standards for the specific responsibilities of firm personnel for an individual
audit engagement.
Now to the broad scope of corporate governance. As
many of you know, IFAC has taken a leadership role in responding to the crisis
in corporate governance. We regard this as a long-term challenge, one that will
require long-term solutions, not quick fixes. And we are far from alone in
addressing these issues. Just last month, the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development – OECD – approved a revised version of its
Principles of Corporate Governance to address issues that have undermined the
confidence of investors in company management. The revised principles include
new recommendations for good practice in corporate behavior. IFAC contributed
to the process through which the OECD undertook the revision and supports both
the principles and the encouragement for international convergence of corporate
governance practices that are based on these principles. I would encourage you
all to go to the OECD website to view and understand these principles.
The issuance of these new principles further
reinforces IFAC’s position that to rebuild and maintain public trust in
companies and stock markets, action must be taken at all points along the
information supply chain.This involves management and boards of directors,
auditors, standard setters as well as lawyers, investment bankers, credit
rating agencies and the media. At each point, individuals must take
responsibility for their actions. Everyone in this room shares this
responsibility. We must succeed, because the stakes are too high to do
otherwise. All of us must be committed to high ethical standards and be
vigilant in discharging the responsibility we have for ensuring public
confidence in the markets. This must be our shared vision because, again, the stakes
are so high.
In 2002, IFAC established an independent,
international Task Force that produced a report, Rebuilding Public Confidence
in Financial Reporting, released in July of last year. This report provides a
number of important recommendations addressing a range of corporate governance
issues. The report lists and explains principles of best practices that call
for specific action at all points in the information supply chain.
Specific recommendations include the following:
Effective corporate ethics codes need to be in place
and actively monitored; such codes should be supported by training.
Codes of conduct need to be put in place for other
participants in the financial reporting process - such as investment analysts
and lawyers - and their compliance should be monitored.
Incentives to misstate financial information need to
be reduced, and companies must refrain from forecasting profits with an
unrealistic level of precision.
Audit effectiveness needs to be raised, primarily
through greater attention to audit quality control processes.
Complementing this report is a document released just
this past February by IFAC’s Professional Accountants in Business Committee,
the PAIB Committee. This report, entitled Enterprise Governance: Getting the
Balance Right, analyzes a number of prominent recent case studies to develop
recommendations covering the range of enterprise governance. For those of you
unfamiliar with the term, enterprise governance includes both corporate
governance and corporate performance. The committee found that four key
elements underpin an organization’s success: culture and tone at the top; the
chief executive; the board of directors; and internal controls. The report
notes that governance and performance need to be in harmony and performing well
in order to enhance the chances of organizational success. Our focus is on good
governance, but as the PAIB discovered, good governance on its own cannot make
a company successful. Companies need to balance conformance with performance.
Bad governance can ruin a company, but cannot, on its own, ensure its success.
These reports have not been issued in isolation.
Instead, they are one part of a strategy that includes IFAC reviewing and
monitoring corporate governance standards worldwide. IFAC member bodies have
agreed to encourage key stakeholders in their home countries to adopt the
recommendations from these two reports. It is a global campaign that is gaining
momentum.
In undertaking the Credibility and Enterprise
Governance reports, three new realities became apparent. I call them realities
because they mark a fundamental shift from the pre-Enron world in which we all
worked, and because they are bringing fundamental change in how we will do
business for years to come. Some elements were emerging or under development
prior to Enron, but the corporate scandals of recent years have given them
visibility and significance as never before.
The first new reality is that improving standards of
corporate governance is not only a national issue that each country must
address, but it is also an international issue.
At the national level, many countries are taking steps
to improve governance through tougher legislation and regulation, new codes of
ethics, and the establishment of oversight bodies. Our stakeholders recognize
the role that accountants and auditors play in value creation as well as in
contributing to good corporate governance. As an example, the EU has already
indicated its plans to adopt international accounting standards and
international standards on auditing by 2005. This is a very important
development, though Europe is not alone in taking this course.
Governments and regulators increasingly understand
that international standards, already established or being developed by bodies
like IFAC, are the soundest method of ensuring the reliable functioning of the
global capital markets. To this end, on the international front, IFAC seeks to
work closely with organizations like the Financial Stability Forum, which aims
to achieve stability in capital markets through dialogue amongst national
governments and financial institutions. These activities help to achieve IFAC’s
goal of convergence to international standards – a goal that is vital to
achieving comparability of financial information around the globe and
ultimately, financial stability.
IFAC also actively supports the International
Accounting Standards Board’s program of global International Financial
Reporting Standards, and we endorse countries around the world that implement
regulations consistent with IOSCO’s Principles of Securities Regulation.
The second of the three new realities I referred to is
that enhanced corporate governance is a team effort. It takes the committed
effort of accountants, executive management, the board of directors, audit
committees and regulators. Each of these groups must recognize its unique
public interest responsibility. There’s a dichotomy at work here: no one
profession or group can ensure an organization’s good corporate governance, but
the failure of one group can put good governance at risk – thus compromising
the protection offered to stakeholders.
Finally, the third, and perhaps most important
reality, is that good corporate governance cannot be established if
organizations are not committed to high standards of individual and
institutional integrity. As we’ve seen over the past two-and-a-half years,
failures in integrity were perhaps the lead factor in these corporate scandals.
In order to prevent them from occurring in the future, a culture of integrity must
take hold. While sanctions are necessary for those who do not comply with legal
and regulatory requirements, what is far more effective is building a culture
of good governance that prevents those sanctions from ever having to be
implemented. In IFAC’s recent Enterprise Governance report, the writers
describe the ideal environment as comprising a virtuous circle of integrity and
ethics, based on the conscious decision by all parties to take good governance
seriously.
I meet regularly with the international leaders of
accountancy bodies and the leaders of the accounting accounting firms, as well
as regulators and standard setters. What I have learned is that we are
increasingly viewed as a global profession with the ability to effect change
that is in the public interest. This brings with it tremendous opportunity, as
well as challenge. We can all take a leadership role in enhancing public trust
not only in our profession, but through the whole governance chain. Everyone in
this room has an equal role to play; we are all partners. Every day, we must
bear in mind we have deliberately set the bar high because we demand no less of
ourselves and because the public demands no less of us.
I urge you to pursue activities to promote good
corporate governance and to continue to explore, at a regional level, the
exchange and coordination of ideas. It is through exchanges such as this that
the accountancy profession can become the impetus for strengthening corporate
governance policies, and in doing so, rebuild trust not only in the profession
but in the markets in which we operate.
I will end by repeating what I said earlier - at one
level is very simple – if sustainable economic growth is the goal, good
corporate governance is essential.
Thank you very much for your attention.
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