Why Attend
Corporate governance is a key topic that has recently started attracting more attention in business schools and among legislatures, with this trend only increasing. While there are different models for corporate governance, all of them aim at organizing the relation between company and stakeholders. Governance models start with Shareholder Wealth Maximization (SWM) that stresses owners rights, as applied mainly in the US and UK. Other methods of governance, applied in Germany or Japan for example, bring other stakeholders, such as the workforce and bankers strongly into play. In addition to these models, this course also covers the reasons why board membership may be one tier or two tiers, and includes discussions about board structure, committees, their functions and duties, the audit committee and the appointment and remuneration committee. Other topics discussed are the role of the chairman and the effect of institutional investors.
Course Methodology
The course is built on presentations by the instructor and the participants and includes exercises and case studies to be discussed in the training.
Course Objectives
By the end of the course, participants will be able to:
- List the essential fundamentals and significance of corporate governance
- Analyze corporate governance models and suggest improvements
- Assess the ethical and policy considerations underpinning shareholders, Board of Directors (BOD), auditors, senior management and executives
- Decide on the corporate governance structure that is best suitable for the business model
- Deploy corporate governance best practices
- Apply disclosures and transparency requirements issued by IFRS and other authorities
Course Outline
- Overview of Corporate Governance (CG)
- Definition of corporate governance
- The scope of corporate governance
- Essential corporate governance principles
- The macro governance picture
- Philosophies affecting corporate governance
- CG code of conduct and global principles
- Models and mechanism of CG
- The Shareholder Wealth Maximization (SWM) model
- The Corporate Wealth Maximization (CWM) model
- International models of corporate governance
- The board of directors
- The audit committee
- Environment for corporate control
- Stakeholders in corporate governance
- Stakeholders
- Shareholders rights
- Different types of directors
- Directors’ duties and rights
- Role of chairman and corporate officers
- Internal auditors and external auditors
- Institutional investors and minority stakeholders
- Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) view on stakeholders
- Deloitte governance framework
- KPMG professional judgment process
- Risk based decision making
- CG failure effects
- The efficient board
- Functions and structures of corporate governance
- Starting from board of directors
- Alternative board structures
- Unitary and two tier board models
- Independence of the board
- Selection, remuneration and evaluation of the board
- Analyzing current company’s CG system
- Planning and organizing CG objectives and resources
- Communicating and implementing CG principles
- Practical corporate governance best practices
- International Corporate Governance Network (ICGN)
- OECD corporate governance principles
- Disclosure and transparency
- Financial and operating results versus company objectives
- Remuneration policy for board members and key executives
- Related party transactions
- Timely, accurate and cost efficient access to information by users