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Why embrace Good Governance

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Structures will only work if individual Councillors ensure that they exercise 'the Power of One' ... constitutes 'necessary Board information' as to past/future ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why embrace Good Governance


1
Why embrace Good Governance?
  • Victorian TAFE Association - 2 June 2002, Wodonga
    Anne Dalton, Partner

2
Good Governance
  • WHAT?
  • do we mean by Corporate Governance?
  • Corporate Governance in the public sector.
  • what are the basic principles?
  • WHY?
  • does it matter?

3
Good Governance
  • Not a new concept
  • Definitions many and varied

4
Good Governance
  • Processes by which organisations directed,
    controlled and held to account
  • Authority, accountability, stewardship,
    leadership, direction and control
  • Governance not management

5
Good Governance
  • Ira Millsteins definition the necessary
    balancing of corporateaccountability with
    innovation and entrepreneurial risk taking

6
Good Governance
  • Management
  • day-to-day conduct - to achieve the
    organisations objectives
  • Governance
  • stewardship - responsibility to set strategic
    course, monitor progress, oversee and guide the
    organisation

7
Good Governance
  • Importance of link between corporate governance
    practices and corporate performance
  • Emphasis on performance - not conformance - one
    size does not fit all
  • Commitment to the outcomes of corporate practices
    rather than simply a focus on the process of
    compliance

8
Good Governance The 4 Pillars
ACCOUNTABILITY
DISCLOSURE
Audit Independence
StrategySetting and Monitoring
Directors Duties
Board Composition
Conflicts of Interest
Management Information
RemunerationDirectors and Executives
Legislative requirement and Parliamentary Accounta
bility
Directors Inductionand Performance review
Board Accessto IndependentAdvice
Board Committees
TRANSPARENCY
INDEPENDENCE
9
Good Governance
  • Corporate Governance in the Public Sector
  • Existence of Parliament, Ministers, Boards and
    CEOs creates an elaborate set of relationships in
    the Public Sector
  • Their respective powers, roles and
    responsibilities of each party results in greater
    management complexity in terms of stewardship and
    accountability that is the private sector
  • Level of tension between business imperatives and
    legislative requirements. Board must manage
    these tensions in best interests of the
    organisation

10
Good Governance
  • Structures will only work if individual
    Councillors ensure that they exercise the Power
    of One
  • Duty of care and diligence - s 180(1)
  • Care and diligence of a reasonable director in
    the companys circumstances occupying the same
    office with the same responsibilities

11
Good Governance
  • Duty of Good Faith - s 181
  • Care and diligence of a reasonable director in
    the organisations circumstances occupying the
    same office with the same responsibilities

12
Good Governance
  • Duty of Good Faith - s 181
  • Must act in good faith in best interests of the
    organisation and for a proper purpose

13
Good Governance
  • Not to improperly use information and position -
    s 181, s 182, s 183, s 184
  • To disclose material personal interests - s 191

14
Good Governance
  • Good Faith
  • loyalty, honesty in preferring interests of
    corporation to extraneous or ulterior interests
  • Proper Purpose
  • main goal of decision was within constitutional,
    legislative design of power exercised

15
Good Governance
  • Best Interests
  • path taken is best chosen at the time for
    corporation (ie existing and future stakeholders)
  • No Personal Interest
  • free from personal motivation, hope, gain, loss
    or duty or loyalty to another corporation

16
Good Governance
  • Major beyond process governance issues
  • What constitutes necessary Board information as
    to past/future performance?
  • What constitutes sufficient Board education?
  • Access to consultants
  • Access to middle managers

17
Good Governance
  • Why does governance matter?
  • Board has stewardship for stakeholders - ie
    government structures and community
  • Link between long term corporate survival and
    effective corporate governance practices
  • Public asking where were the directors/Board?

18
Good Governance
  • Effective Governance - How?
  • One size does not fit all
  • Directors ask difficult questions
  • Beware dominant director - especially if
    executive director
  • Audit committee - robust, independent,
    understand its role, report fully to Board

19
Good Governance
  • Effective Governance - How?
  • Board papers effectively presented
  • Effective risk management systems, regular
    reports on operational, legal, financial,
    occupational health and safety risks

20
Good Governance
  • Effective Governance - How?
  • Stakeholders expect greater transparency,
    accountability
  • Consider need to change external auditors
    regularly to avoid capture

21
Good Governance
  • Never appoint former auditor/director
  • Audit committee - made up of external directors
  • Audit committee - appoint, interview auditor
    without executives present

22
Good Governance
  • Why embrace good governance?
  • Puts you in the best position when you are called
    to account by stakeholders
  • Defensive Tactic
  • Good governance gives you the framework for
    forward planning and setting the strategic
    direction of the organisation - going forward
  • Advancing into the Future
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