GRC
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Source: Anthony Tarantino, Governance, Risk, and Compliance Handbook, Wiley, 2008.
GRC ⌘
- Governance
- Risk
- Compliance
- Distinction is sometimes blurred
Governance ⌘
- Governance - Latin: steering
- "Addresses the processes systems and control by which organizations operate"
- Applies to all organizations: public and private
- "Includes the exercise of legal and regulatory authority and the user of institutional resources to manage organizations"
- Area of Economics: separation of ownership and control (board directors, owners, managers, employees, suppliers, customers, regulators and communities"
Corporate governance ⌘
- "Processes by which an organization defends the interests of the stakeholders"
- Refers to the relationship between those who govern and those who are governed.
- In politics: relationship between the government and citizens
- GAP: Present State, Desired State, Plan to get there
Short Chronology ⌘
- 500 BC 孔子, Analects
- 31 BC Rome (shareholding)
- 1600 East India Company (Court of Directors, separation of ownership and control)
- 1844 UK, Joint Stock Company Act
- 1930 Bank of International Settlement
- 1933 US, The Securities Act (regulation over securities markets, registration disclosure, SEC)
- 1984 G10, BIS creates the Basel Committee
- 1977 US, Foreign Currupt Practices Act (FCPA, prevation of bribery of foreign officials)
- 1985 US, EU, COSO
- 1988 G10, Basel accord (minimal requirements)
- 1990 UK, Polly Peck, CCI, Maxwell
- 1992 UK, Cadbury Committee published first code on corporate governance
- 1999 G10, Basel II
- 2001 US, Encrom
- 2002 US, SOX
- 2004 US, COSO II (ERM)
- 2011 Global banks are required to be live under Basel II
Commonly Accepted Principles of Corporate Governance ⌘
- Rights and Fair Treatment of Shareholders
- Rules and Responsibilities of the Board of Directors
- Ethical and Professional Behaviour
- Financial Transparency and Disclosure
- Internal Controls
Models of Corporate Governance ⌘
Anglo-American Model
- priority to shareholder interests
- powerful CEO
- board provides overachieving stewardship
The coordinated Model
- prevalent in Europe and Japan
- "gives priority to the interest of managers employees, customers, suppliers and the community in general"
- slower growth in profits, more control over ethics and morality
Family-Owned Company Model
- Asia, Latin America, also (Span, France, Italy)
- Transparency is not welcomed
Agency vs Stewardship ⌘
Agency theory
- separation of Board Chair (Chairman) and CEO
- Greater monitoring and sanctioning of management
Stewardship
- Shared incumbency of the roles
- More independence in decision making, faster reaction to changes
Risk ⌘
- Risk
- "Possibility of loss or injury created by an activity or by a person"
- doesn't have to be bad
- opportunies can come from a risk
- Risk Management
- "seeks to identify, assess and measure risk and then develop countermeasers to mitigate and minimize its impact"
Basel II major areas of operational risk ⌘
- Internal fraud
- External fraud
- Employment practices
- Clients, products and business processes
- Damage to physical assets
- Business disruptions and system failures
- Execution, delivery, and process management
COSO and ERM ⌘
- COSO
- Committee of Sponsoring Organizations
- In 2004, COSO published update to 1992 risk management framwork, AKA 'Enterprise Risk Management (ERM)
Compliance and Internal Controls
- Compliance
- acting in accordance with established laws, regulations, protocols, standards and specifications.
- Internal Controls
- terms used in finacial reporting
- COSO specified internal controls approach
- SOX section 404
Globalization ⌘
- GDP
- GDP PPP
IFRS vs GAAP ⌘
- GAAP
- Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
- Mostly in the US
- IFRS
- International Financial Reporting Standard
Harmonization ⌘
- Equivalnce (standards)
- GAAP, IFRS
- Reciprocity
- Transparency
Basel II ⌘
Aplies to Large Banks
- over 250 billion in consolidated assets or
- 10 billion in foreign exposure
Smaller companies can be "punished" for non compliance by rating agencies
World Bank six categories of governance ⌘
- Voice and accountability
- Political stability and absence of violence
- Government effectiveness
- Regulatory quality
- Rule of law
- Control of corruption
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worldwide_Governance_Indicators