The Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development is jumping on the corporate governance bandwagon, with a drive to strengthen corporate governance practices worldwide.
OECD secretary general Donald Johnston invited senior officials of key international organisations and other experts on ongoing national and international initiatives to ensure market integrity to a meeting in Paris on November 15. Participants included Sir Adrian Cadbury, who headed an influential U.K. review of corporate governance in the early 1990s; Andrew Crockett, general manager of the Bank for International Settlements and chairman of the Financial Stability Forum; Veronique Ingram, an Australian Treasury official who chairs the OECD steering group on corporate governance; and representatives of business and labour unions.
They discussed the role of the OECD’s Principles of Corporate Governance, ahead of a forthcoming review mandated by OECD ministers at their annual meeting, and of other OECD Instruments relevant to market integrity, such as the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and the Anti-bribery Convention.
The OECD’s principles, first adopted in 1999, provide an international benchmark for best practice in corporate governance and have become a global reference for shaping public policy through regional roundtables organised by the OECD and the World Bank in emerging and transition economies. They are used as one of the criteria in country assessments by the World Bank. The review of the principles will evaluate weaknesses in present systems of corporate oversight and identify areas for improvement. The challenge facing policymakers is to strike a balance between government oversight of markets and corporations and increased monitoring by market participants themselves.
OECD launches drive to strengthen corporate governance
Principles of corporate governance up for review
- By: IE Staff
- November 15, 2002 November 15, 2002
- 09:20