5. Corporate Governance and Ethical Considerations Flashcards

1
Q

What is corporate governance?

A

Refers to how companies are directed and controlled.

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2
Q

What is an issue within corporate governance?

A

The separation of ownership and control.

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3
Q

What is the relationship between shareholders and directors?

A

Shareholders own the company and will appoint directors to manage the day-to-day running of the company.

Directors are agents of the shareholders and should act in their best interests.

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4
Q

Why is the separation of ownership and control an issue?

A

Because it’s hard to know whether directors are running a company in the shareholder’s best interests.

Shareholders may only get a set of financial statements and attend a general meeting once a year.

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5
Q

How may a director abuse the trust of the shareholders?

A
  • Award themselves excessive salary
  • Award themselves excessive share options
  • Give themselves generous perks
  • Make loans from the company to themselves
  • They can take undue risks because success will likely increase their salary, while failure will result in shareholders losing the most, and their own position remains relatively secure.
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6
Q

What do the recent corporate governance rules aim to do?

A

Allow shareholders to better monitor what directors are doing and how their company is actually performing.

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7
Q

What does OECD stand for?

A

Organisation of Economic Cooperation Development

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8
Q

What are the six principals of a corporate governance framework promoted by the OECD?

A
  • Should promote transparent and fair markets and support effective supervision and enforcement
  • Should protect shareholder’s rights and ensure all are treated fairly
  • Should provide for stock markets to contribute to good corporate governance (e.g. prohibit insider trading)
  • Should recognize rights of all stakeholders (not just shareholders)
  • Should ensure timely and accurate disclosure of all material matters (e.g. financial position, performance, ownership and governance)
  • Should ensure the strategic guidance of the entity, effective monitoring of management by the board and the board’s accountability to the entity and their shareholders.
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9
Q

Is the Organisation of Economic Cooperate Development (OECD) a global or local organisation?

A

Global

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10
Q

What are the five main principles of the UK Corporate Governance code (based on the OECD principles)?

A
  • Board leadership and company purpose
  • Division of responsibilities
  • Composition, succession and evaluation
  • Audit, risk and internal control
  • Remuneration
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11
Q

Describe board leadership and company purpose regarding the UK Corporate Governance code.

A
  • Every company should be headed by an effective board
  • The board is collectively responsible for the long-term success of the company
  • All directors must act with integrity
  • Directors should lead by example and promote the desired culture.
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12
Q

Describe division of responsibilities regarding the UK Corporate Governance code.

A
  • Should be clear division between the running of the board and the executive responsibility for running the company’s business
  • No one individual should dominate decision making (roles of CEO and chairman should not be performed by the same person)
  • Non-executive directors (NEDs) must be appointed to the board and constructively challenge and help develop proposals on strategy
  • NEDs sit in at board meetings and have full voting rights, but do not have day to day executive or managerial responsibilities
  • NEDs monitor, advise and warn the executive directors
  • Should be roughly 50/50 balance between executive and non-executive directors
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13
Q

Describe composition, succession and evaluation regarding the UK Corporate Governance code.

A
  • Appointments to the board should be subject to a formal, rigorous and transparent procedure led by a nomination committee
  • Majority of the nomination committee should be independent NEDs
  • The board and it’s committees should have a combination of skills, experience and knowledge
  • Length of service of the board as a whole should be considered and membership regularly refreshed
  • The post of chairman should not be held beyond nine years
  • Board should undertake formal and rigorous annual evaluation of its own performance and that of it’s committees and individual directors
  • All directors should be submitted for re-election annually
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14
Q

Describe audit, risk and internal control regarding the UK Corporate Governance code.

A
  • Board should establish formal and transparent policies and procedures to ensure the independence and effectiveness of internal and external audit and the integrity of financial statements
  • Audit committee (NEDs) should be established to liaise with both internal and external auditors
  • The directors are responsible for establishing an internal control system and must review the need for internal audit
  • The board should present a fair, balanced and understandable assessment of the company’s position and prospects and establish procedures to manage risk, oversee internal controls and determine the nature and extent of the principle risks the company is willing to take to achieve it’s long-term strategic objectives.
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15
Q

What was the situation before audit committees and why was it unsatisfactory?

A

The finance director liaised with auditors.

Not ideal because the finance director was often the person responsible for accounting problems.

Therefore, auditors were often reporting problems to the person responsible.

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16
Q

Describe remuneration regarding the UK Corporate Governance code.

A
  • Remuneration should be sufficient to attract, retain and motivate directors of sufficient quality… But avoid paying more than is necessary
  • Significant portion of executive directors’ remuneration may be structured to link rewards to corporate and individual performance
    (Profit related pay is encouraged so that the directors don’t receive high pay irrespective of company performance)
  • Should be a formal and transparent procedure for developing policy on executive remuneration and for fixing remuneration packages of individual directors.
    (A remuneration committee (NEDs) should be formed to fix directors’ remuneration)
17
Q

What is principles based corporate governance?

A

Broad principles are laid down and it’s the boards responsibility to apply those principles as they see fit.

Allows flexibility to deal with a wide variety of circumstances.

18
Q

What is compliance based corporate governance?

A

Very specific requirements and rules have to be signed off by the board and often also by the auditors.

This approach, embodied in the Sarbanes Oxley Act allows much less flexibility but increases the strictness with which the rules are applied.

19
Q

Who uses principle based, and who uses compliance based corporate governance?

A

UK and most of Europe use principles based.

USA uses compliance based.

20
Q

What does comply or explain refer to in relation to corporate governance?

A

The code has no force in law so is enforced on listed companies through the stock exchange.

Listed companies are expected to state that they have complied with the code, or explain to the shareholders why they haven’t.

This allows some flexibility.

21
Q

What is corporate social responsibility?

A

The idea that companies shouldn’t be run solely for the benefit of the shareholders, but should take into account the interests of other stakeholders.

22
Q

What are some considerations in corporate social responsibility?

A
  • Should companies adhere to the minimum required by law, or go above and beyond (wages, pollution, working hours)
  • Do directors have legal authority to make non-essential payments? They are using shareholders assets so it’s argued they have no right to spend them needlessly.
  • Who decides beneficiaries? Simply decided by directors or should others have a say.
23
Q

What are the benefits of having an ethical company?

A
  • Unethical acts will usually be punished through law, compensation or the loss of goodwill and reputation.
  • Ethical organisations spend less to ensure regulations are followed.
  • Lower risk also means banks and other providers of capital will be willing to supply money at lower rates
  • Increases reputation, which means higher chance of finding partners to form joint ventures or satisfying customers.
  • Attracts better employees
  • Increases sales
24
Q

Order regulations, ethics and law from least demanding to most demanding.

A

Law, regulations, ethics

25
Q

What is the ethical principle that promotes the greatest good for the greatest number?

A

Utilitarianism/consequentialism

26
Q

What is the ethical principle that says behaviour should be based on absolute moral values?

A

Duty/deontological approach

27
Q

What’s the difference between relativism and absolutism?

A

Relativism says there are many acceptable ethical standpoints.
- Provides more flexibility but has more vague guidance

Absolutism says behaviour should be based on absolute moral values.
- Source of moral values are an issue. What if two people follow separate ethical codes?

28
Q

What are four unethical payments?

A
  • Extortion
  • Bribery
  • Grease money
  • Gifts
29
Q

What values promote ethical behaviour in organisations?

A
  • Openness
  • Trust
  • Honesty
  • Respect
  • Empowerment
  • Accountability
30
Q

What does IFAC stand for?

A

The International Federation of Accountants

31
Q

How does the IFAC define public interest?

A

The net benefits derived for, and procedural rigour employed on behalf of all society in relation to any action, decision or policy.

32
Q

What are some public interests that accountants are obligated to act for.

A
  • Increased economic certainty
  • Sound decision-making
  • Sound and transparent financial information
  • Comparability across different organizations and jurisdictions
  • Sound corporate governance
  • Effective performance management
  • Increased efficiency and better resource utilisation
  • Provide sound financial and non-financial reporting to shareholders, investors, taxpayers and all parties impacted by reporting
  • Provide truthful, effective communication with parties related to the corporate government processes
33
Q

Who is a corporate code of ethics implemented by?

A

Top management

34
Q

What are the advantages of a corporate code of ethics?

A
  • Empgasises the organisation’s values
  • Guidance to employees and directors
  • Risk reduction (avoids legal problems)
  • Good public relations and reputation

Following are improved:
- Equal opportunity
- Bullying
- Use of the internet
- Reporting wrong-doing
- Bribery
- Money-laundering
- Response to conflicts of interest

35
Q

When do ethical conflicts arise?

A

When one or both of the following are encountered:
- Internal or external pressures act as obstacles to following appropriate action
- Conflicts in applying relevant professional and legal standards

36
Q

What body offers a framework through which ethical dilemmas may be addressed?

A

IFAC

37
Q

What is the IFAC Code framework for addressing ethical dilemmas?

A

(1) Consider the facts of the situation
(2) Consider the ethical principles involved
(3) Consider relevant internal procedures
(4) Consider the alternative courses of action:
- Escalate internally
- Document every action taken to resolve the conflict
- Escalate externally to auditor, legal advisor, professional body.

Consider the consequences of each course of action. If resolution seems unlikely, disassociate yourself from the issue.