Other measures targeted at the company have been made available in Section 23E of the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956, which reads: “If a company … fails to comply with the listing conditions or delisting conditions or grounds or commits a breach thereof, it or he shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding twenty-five crore rupees.” Perhaps the use of such targeted enforcement measures may like generate greater compliance without directly affecting the interests of the public shareholders. It is not clear if enforcement pertaining to violation of corporate governance norms has been initiated yet against any company under Section 23E.
Enforcement of Corporate Governance Norms: Anecdotal Evidence
Written by
on
Comments
2 responses to “Enforcement of Corporate Governance Norms: Anecdotal Evidence”
-
But even if one were to consider the Section 23 E sanction in lieu of the suspension of trading sanction, Section 23 E speaks of the levy on the "company….". This induces moral hazard in agent-behavior; because the compliance of norms will have to be done by the agents acting on behalf of the company. And the sanction does not implicate the agent (but penalizes only the principal– the company (and therefore the shareholders), 23E has, potentially, similar effect to suspension of trading in that it (derivatively) penalizes the public shareholders. This penalty in lieu of a option to exit can perhaps be preferable in the theoretical scenario where the levy of penalty induces the exit but it is unlikely that the public shareholders will exercise the option of exit and lose out on otherwise sound investment merely because the penalty is levied; and practically, it seems difficult that the penalty will be the maximum leviable under section 23E.Of course that is not to say, I support the status quo penalty of suspension– my point is that it might be better to make the compliance officer(s) personally responsible so that they retain enough skin in the game. Although, the shareholders can "claw back" the levy from the culprit-officers in the model that is proposed, given the collective action problems inter se between the shareholders, I think shareholder initiative in this regard is considerably disincentivized.
LikeLike
-
The term ‘corporate governance‘ raises a debate: is it an analogy or just a metaphor?
LikeLike
Leave a reply to Mandar Cancel reply