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Stakeholders Moving To N-Dimensional Space Anglo Saxon vs. European Model of Corporate Governance
Human Resource Development and customer-centric behavior have become modern managements’ article of faith. It is for the corporate governance theory to change itself to keep pace with the practice. In short, it is moving from the linear thinking of about shareholder value to the n-dimensional space that includes everyone1. The Anglo-Saxon system is typical for countries such as UK,...
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Human Resource Development and customer-centric behavior
have become modern managements’ article of faith. It is for
the corporate governance theory to change itself to keep pace
with the practice. In short, it is moving from the linear thinking
of about shareholder value to the n-dimensional space that
includes everyone
1. The Anglo-Saxon system is typical for countries such
as UK, USA and Australia and is also known as the
shareholder system. Large and liquid stock markets, low
concentration of ownership, one-tier board of directors,
and relatively high level of protection for minority
shareholders and dominant role of institutional
investors are basic characteristics of the Anglo-Saxon
corporate governance system. Management is not
controlled nor supervised by any of the corporation’s
stakeholder groups except the shareholders. The stock
market and investors through the Board exert control
over the management.1
The Anglo-American model of
the firm emphasizes shareholder value as the only or
last purpose of the firm to which the other (stakeholder)
purposes are instrumental or, at least, functional. The
European model of the firm emphasizes that the firm is
a multi-purpose institution in which shareholder value
plays the central but not the only role. Labor as the most
important stakeholder group besides the shareholders
should be represented and have a right to participate in
the decision-making on the level of the second board,
i.e. the advisory board in the two-tier-board system.2
2. Hampel Committee was categorical in upholding the
primacy of shareholders’ interests on grounds of
expediency. It goes on to say that the directors as a
board are responsible for relations with stakeholders;
but they are accountable to the shareholders. This is
not simply a technical point. From a practical point
of view to redefine the directors’ responsibilities in
terms of the stakeholders would mean identifying
all the various stakeholder groups; and deciding the
nature and extent of the directors’ responsibility to
each. The result would be that the directors would not
be effectively accountable to anyone since there would
be no clear yardstick for judging their performance. This
is a recipe neither for good governance nor for corporate
success.3
Supremacy of Shareowners’ interest?
3. Another argument for maximizing shareholders’ value
is premised on the notion that the owners risk their
investment capital and are the sole residual claimants,
while other parties (e.g. employees) are compensated
on the basis of their marginal products (i.e. paid wages
by competitive labor markets).4 Similarly, debtholders
are compensated by way of interest and suppliers get
paid for what they deliver. If they are not happy with
the way a corporation is run, they can simply shift to
any other corporation. Many writers do concede that it
is wise to cater to the interests of the stakeholders such
as employees in enlightened self-interest but they don’t
concede their legitimate claim on the way a company is
run. When Robert Owen raised the demand for a ten-hour
day in 1810, and instituted it in his socialist enterprise
at New Lanark and when he had formulated the goal of
the eight-hour day and coined the slogan: “Eight hours
labor, Eight hours recreation, Eight hours rest”5, he was
only acting from higher moral and religious principles
and there was no reference of employees’ fundamental
right to have a say in the way a company is run. The
incredulity of Robert Owen’s contemporaries on seeing
him successful instead of being ruined has not ceased
even today. The notion that shareowner interest should
dominate those of all other corporate constituents
is inconsistent with observed behavior of successful
firms.6
4. The debate started with employee representation on the
Board but it is no longer limited to employees. The primary
focus of regulators is still on employees when they
talk of stakeholders. G20-OECD Principles of Corporate
Governance have introduced a separate principle to
accommodate the role of stakeholders in corporate
governance. The modern thinking on the subject has
expanded the ambit to include all the stakeholders i.e.
not only employees but also debt providers, suppliers,
customers, community, and governments. Inclusion
of stakeholders in corporate governance theory is
still not mainstream, yet paradoxically much of the
focus among professional managers is on Customer
Relationship Management (CRM), Intangible Assets,
Supply Chain Management, Balanced Scorecards and
so on rest explicitly on the proposition that corporation
is a network of interdependent people, organizations
and interests7. The new management thinking gives
much importance to Human Resource Development,
collaboration with the suppliers and their development.
Corporations go great length in investing in technical
capabilities of their employees and suppliers as their
performance directly affects the corporation. From
the point of view of employees and the suppliers, the
relationship ceases to be purely transactional and
contractual. Their investment of time and money
in firm specific skills ties them down with the
corporation for years. It is not correct to say that if
they don’t like the way the corporation is run they can
simply walk away and enter into new contracts. If they
had no assurance that their interests and viewpoint
will be taken into account they would not agree
for any investment for long term up gradation. In
the modern times even customers are tied down to
the corporations for a much longer time. An obvious
example is buying a computer operating system. It is
not easy to simply change the operating system as all
the downstream applications are built on the original
operating system. Any customer who feels that the
corporation is not likely to take their interests into
consideration while taking decisions will not buy that
company’s operating system.
5. Another argument put forward by those who advocate
supremacy of shareowners’ interest is about an
overall alignment of interests. It is argued that if
the company does well, the employees will also get
more compensation and their jobs will be secure. The
suppliers will have an assured business, community
will have jobs, debt providers will have assurance
of their debts being repaid and as the marginal costs
come down, the customers will have long-term supplies
at a lower cost. Let us begin by examining the case
of debtholders. Their case seems to be simplest as
no complex socio-psychological factors are involved.
Are the interests of debtholders and equity holders
really aligned perfectly? The perception of risk
for the two sets is completely different. Debtholders
are satisfied with a level of risk that just turns in
some profit, as they will receive assured returns at
least possible risk. On the other hand, the equity
holders might prefer a much higher level of risk, as
they will like to take the company to an exponential
growth path even at some risk of failure. Similarly, a
company’s policy of outsourcing or recruiting outside
the local community might put the interests of the
shareowners and the community at considerable
variance. Communities may like the company to spend
considerable sums on CSR whereas shareowners
might like to minimize it to the bare minimum. An
anecdote narrated by a senior consultant is worth
recounting. In the early nineties, Tata Steel appeared
to be in terminal decline. Consultants were called.
They found that the company was spending way too
much on maintaining hospitals and the Jamshedpur
township when the need was to conserve capital.
JJ Irani, instead of cutting down the costs on community,
fired the consultants and motivated employees to
turn around the ailing company. A better-documented
story relates to a meeting that JJ Irani was to
attend on downsizing the workforce. Instead of
downsizing, he gave lifetime guarantee for employment
not only to workers but to their children too. The
decision was overall financially beneficial and the
workforce reduced within ten years from 78000 to
47000 due to natural attrition. In 1914, Henry Ford’s
decision to double the wages while reducing the shift
timings appeared to be crazy but was enormously
successful not only in retaining workers but creating
demand for cars in the working classes.8 A narrower
view taken strictly in the interest of maximizing
shareholder value would have been disastrous for these
companies. We can conclude that mindless pursuit of
narrowly defined shareholders’ interests is neither in
the interest of the company nor does it embrace the
interests of stakeholders.
G20 OECD Principles of Corporate
Governance – Principle IV - The Role of
Stakeholders
6. The G20 OECD Principles look at the role of stakeholders
from various perspectives:
- Employee Union Perspective
The rights of stakeholders that are established
by law or through mutual agreements are to be
respected and they should have opportunity to
obtain effective redress for violation of their rights.
On the face of it, it might be doubted as to what value
the principle is adding when some rights have already
been established by law or mutual agreement. It
is an issue of the mindset of the Boards and the
senior managers. Even where law establishes
rights, there can be a tendency to deny and litigate
to the bitter end even at a financial loss as not
yielding to ‘unreasonable’ demands of employees
might appear as a matter of principle. This kind of
false principle can be met only with the strength of
an internationally acceptable principle.
Mechanisms for employee participation shouldbe permitted to develop. The import of this is
not immediately clear unless one looks at OECD
Methodology for Assessment. It means that
stock ownership plans and other profit sharing
mechanisms. It also concerns the Pension
Plans where the fund is run by employer-controlled
trusts. The principles require that the trust should
not be required to obtain consent of the company
to vote.
- Creditors’ Perspective
The corporate governance framework should be
complemented by an effective, efficient insolvency
framework and by effective enforcement of creditor
rights. This principle is something that is primarily
for the governments to implement. A good insolvency
framework where the residual value in a defaulted
bond can be quickly realized goes a long way in
reducing the cost and increasing the availability of
capital.
- Information Perspective
Where stakeholders participate in the corporate
governance process, they should have access to
relevant, sufficient and reliable information on a
timely and regular basis. This principle is in tune
with the disclosure-based regime that is followed
by almost all modern securities market regulators.
On the face of it, given the easy availability of
electronic dissemination, this should be easiest to
follow. However, perverse action is possible by way
of flooding the stakeholders with so much unwanted
and unnecessary information that the very
purpose is lost. An obvious example is the
prospectuses for IPOs that have bloated to hundreds
of finely printed pages in which a crucial piece of
information might lie buried. Regulatory efforts of
reducing the information overload by asking for
abridged prospectuses were thwarted by expanding
those too to touch a hundred pages and the regulator
was forced to limit it to ten pages by providing a
rigid structure. There are issues about the cost of
information and the infrastructure needed to access
information. There are no easy solutions.
- Ethical Perspective
Stakeholders including individual employees
and their representative bodies should be able to
freely communicate their concerns about illegal or
unethical practices to the board and to the competent
public authorities and their rights should not be
compromised for doing this. Almost all countries,
by now realize the importance of promoting trust
in societies. Trust is the backbone of all business
and one common characteristic of all economically
undeveloped societies is their trust deficit. Providing
protection to the whistleblowers is a necessary
condition for developing trust in a society, though
it is not of course, sufficient. The provision of legal
framework for whistleblower protection is not
enough unless there is change of mindset within the
companies. Sometime, the company insiders think
of whistleblowers as traitors. The Boards are still to
learn not think of whistleblowers as trouble makers
or nuisance but an ally.
Integrated Reporting as a Paradigm of
Stakeholders’ Importance
7. A new kid on the block is Integrated Reporting
(IR) which is promoted by International Integrated
Reporting Council (IIRC). The main premise of IR is that
financial capital is not the only capital that is used by
the companies. Reporting is one-sided and incomplete
if it is confined to recounting how a company utilizes
equity and debt. When the investors invest in the capital
of a company, it is expected that the management
will run the company in such a way that the invested
capital will be enhanced and will also yield dividends.
Regeneration of and accretion to capital is the hallmark
of a successful business. A business uses many
capitals other than financial capital. For example, a
company uses buildings and plants in carrying out
its activities. A company that takes good care of its
buildings and plants and keeps on adding to their value
and functionality will be more successful in the long run
than one which does not take care. The neglect or the
abuse might not immediately reflect in their financial
statements. Bankers know this fact instinctively. That
is why they always make it a point to visit the plants
of a company before taking a final decision to lend.
They know that financial statements are not enough.
This kind of capital is called Manufactured Capital (MC)
in the IR parlance. The Manufactured Capital might
belong to the company or it might belong to society.
For example, roads and ports are publicly owned
Manufactured Capital. A company may enhance the MC
during a year or it might destroy it. A mining company
might think that it is being smart in overloading its
trucks and showing a little better financial profit. Yet in
the long run, it will be damaging the roads it uses and
the costs will escalate exponentially in future. It must
be now obvious why Manufactured Capital should be
accounted for.
8. Most of the companies now do account for their
Intellectual Capital in the sense of patents. There is a
little more to intellectual capital than simply patents.
It is the sum total of processes and procedures that
are embedded into the business model of a company
that marks an outstanding company from its mediocre
counterparts. These processes and procedures are what
give confidence to the suppliers and customers about
the consistency and reliability of the company. Even
this type of intellectual capital is to be recognized and
attempts need to be made that it is enhanced over a
period of time rather than letting it deteriorate. Closely
linked to it is Human Capital. There was a time in the
beginning of Industrial Revolution when financial
capital was most important for a company because other
factors of production viz. land and labor were considered
as a commodity. Labor was surplus and was unskilled.
One pair of hands was as good as another. If one
laborer fell sick or died, another quickly replaced him.
Learning at the job took a couple of hours at the most.
These days, it takes months or even years to train a
newcomer. It is the finance that has become a commodity.
You can get it from anywhere in the world at the
click of a mouse. At the very worst, you might have
to pay a few basis points more. On the other hand,
it is often impossible to fully replace a creative and
knowledgeable employee. Companies like Google are
entirely dependent on the skill and creativity of their
employees. Human capital, therefore, needs to be
recognized and accounted for.
9. No company can exist in a vacuum. It is a part of
the society and uses inputs put in by the society. For
example, software companies often employ engineers
trained by the local engineering colleges. If they neglect
to help these colleges to upgrade themselves, they will
lose out on the quality of future recruits. On a broader
scale, a company can operate only till such time as
the society gives it the license to operate. The day, the
company loses that goodwill, its days are numbered.
Therefore, it is necessary to also account for Social
Relationships, like we do for other types of capital.
10. Last, but absolutely not the least, is the natural capital
that a company uses. Every business uses air and water
though it might not always be obvious. It is not only
the power plants that use enormous quantities of water.
Integrated chip manufacturing involves unbelievably
large quantities of water. There was a time it was
considered kosher to abuse the environment thinking
that only the future generations will pay for it. It is no
longer true. The environmental balance has reached
such a delicate stage that the environmental debts are
to be paid here and now.
11. Integrated Reporting is a comprehensive and also a
compact way to look at all the stakeholder interests in a
corporation.
Conclusion
It is a situation where the reporting practices and
management practices have clearly overtaken the theory of
corporate governance. No practical manager ever questions
the importance of Customer Relationship Management or
Supply Chain Management. Human Resources Development
and customer-centric behavior has become modern
managements’ article of faith. It is for the corporate
governance theory to change itself to keep pace with the
practice. In short, it is moving from the linear thinking of
about shareholder value to the n-dimensional space that
includes everyone.
D(aliborka) Dhttp://www.daaam.info/Downloads/Pdfs/proceedings/
proceedings_2011/1361_Becic.pdf.
2 https://www.ukessays.com/essays/
commerce/anglo-american-and-european-model-of-corporate-governancecommerce-
essay.php.
3 www.ecgi.org/codes/documents/hampel_index.htm.
4 Responsible Corporate Governance: towards a Stakeholder Board of Directors? IESE Business School,
University of Navarra WP No. 701, July 2007.
5 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Owen.
6 Redefining the Corporation: Stakeholder Management and Corporate
Wealth- James E. Post; Lee E. Presto Stanford University Press 2002.
7 idbt(?).
8 http://fortune.com/2012/10/01/the-greatest-business-decisions-of-all-time/
Disclaimer – The views expressed in this article are the personal views of the author and are purely informative in nature.