Monitoring and Social Conduct - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Monitoring and Social Conduct

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Monitoring and Social Conduct Ethics, Accounting and Finance – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Monitoring and Social Conduct


1
Monitoring and Social Conduct
  • Ethics, Accounting and Finance

2
Background
  • Co-operative Bank in UK
  • Only investing/lending in/to ethical companies
  • Policy change to include social and ecological
    responsibility to develop social economy
  • Is there a role for banks in influencing ethical
    behaviour?

3
The Players
  • Who are the players that can influence the
    development of a social economy?

4
An Illustrative Case
  • Enron
  • Bank
  • Two years before Enron's 2001 collapse, Citibank
    loaned the company 2.4 billion
  • Citibank wanted to keep Enron afloat to help
    conceal its prior involvement in Enron's fraud
  • Auditor
  • Arthur Andersen covered up dubious accounting
    practices to keep Enron afloat to ensure
    continued revenue from consulting
  • Corporation
  • Enrons excessive creative and highly complex
    accounting systems

5
Key Ethical Issues
6
Lessons Banks
  • Lack of social responsibility
  • Drawing revenue from clients with unethical
    practices
  • Self interest
  • Uncertainty in sustainability of unethical
    clients could cause deception of stakeholders
  • Eg. Citibank created dubious venture (Yosemite)
    in the case of Enron
  • Fear of loss of business revenue
  • Unethical investments are high risk
  • Ethical investments balance risk and return

7
Supporting Ethical Investments
8
Supporting Ethical Investments
9
Lessons - Auditors
  • Conflict of Interest
  • Auditing / Consulting
  • Although different divisions its still the same
    firm
  • Eg. Enron was Arthur Andersens 2nd largest
    client and revenue was predominantly from
    consulting services
  • Relational Interests
  • Eg. Senior Managers at Enron were ex-Andersen
    employees
  • Vested Interests
  • Eg. Andersen was also the auditor for many of the
    energy trading firms which had relationships with
    Enron
  • Failure of Regulatory Monitoring
  • Lack of clarity in the regulations
  • SEC monitoring of independence of auditors

10
Types of Contracts between Enron and Arthur
Andersen
Implicit Relational Contracts E.g. Andersen
obligated to act according to Enrons interests
rather than those of the SECs to ensure
sustained revenue
Specific Investment by parties (Time and Effort)
Relative Impact on Decision Making
Other Explicit Contracts E.g. consulting and
outsourcing services to Enron increased revenue
for Andersen from on-selling opportunities
Explicit Contract Auditor Contract Standard
Auditors contract between Enron and Andersen
Enron employs Arthur Andersen
Enrons decline
Time
11
Lessons - Corporation
  • Creative Accounting
  • Short-term benefit
  • Facilitates a positive valuation of corporation
    for investors
  • Standards developed to influence corporate
    behaviour
  • Could be misused by corporations
  • Financial statements not true and fair
    representation
  • Creative Accounting and Incentive Schemes
  • Increasing shareholder value as a pretence to
    senior managers increasing their own return
    through creative accounting
  • Eg. Enron senior managers had significant stock
    holdings
  • Excessive compensation for unsustainable increase
    in share value
  • Eg. Enron CFO paid bonuses for setting up special
    purpose entities
  • Creative Accounting and Corporate Governance
  • Lack of attention by members of the board
  • Eg. Enron

12
Changing Roles
  • Banks
  • - Policies to take into account ethical
    standing of future and current clientele
  • Engagement
  • Preference
  • Screening (Ethical Investment Research
    Services)
  • Triple Bottom-line.
  • Profitability, Philanthropy, Social
    Responsibility
  • Increased scrutiny of clients
  • Sources of revenue and their sustainability
  • Controlling the use of funds (covenants)
  • Signalling effect
  • Any corporation that fails to receive credit due
    to unethical practices may cause share market
    reaction
  • Needs Collaborative Effort!

13
Changing Roles
  • Auditors
  • Separate auditing and consulting functions
  • Increased regulatory requirements for
    independence
  • Expand definition of auditing to encompass
    social considerations
  • Important to the development of the social
    economy.
  • Difficult to measure the extent of ethical
    compliance needs clear definitions and more
    regulations
  • Extra cost and time burden on organisations

14
  • ?
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