Philippines improves standing on corporate governance list
By Doris C. Dumlao
Philippine Daily Inquirer
Corporate Philippines has modestly
improved its standing on a regional watchlist compiled by investment house CLSA
Asia-Pacific Markets as the Aquino administration ushered in much-needed
governance reforms, tackling government corruption and improving transparency
and accountability.
Based on the report “CG Watch 2012
Corporate Governance in Asia” dated September 10, the Philippines’ overall score
improved by 4 percentage points to 41 percent this year, rising a notch from the
bottom of the list. This year’s cellar dweller on the CLSA’s CG Watch list is
Indonesia.
“It is tempting to state that the
improvement in our survey is a result of a concerted effort among government,
regulators, NGOs [nongovernment organizations] and companies alike to improve
standards. Indeed, there is evidence that our candidly accurate assessment of
the dilapidated state of governance under the Arroyo regime, along with the
reformist impetus from President Aquino’s new administration, galvanized
interested parties into positive action that has borne some fruit,” said the
report, which is published by CLSA every two years in collaboration with the
Asian Corporate Governance Association.
The Philippines is still in the bottom
half of the CG Watch list, joining the ranks of India (51 percent), South Korea
(49 percent), China (45 percent) and Indonesia (37 percent). The higher-ranked
markets include Singapore (69 percent), Hong Kong (66 percent), Thailand (58
percent); Japan and Malaysia (both 55 percent) and Taiwan (53 percent).
Since issuing its last CG Watch report in
2010, the CLSA noted that “cracks” in Asian corporate governance have become
more apparent, resulting in lower scores for some of the countries like Japan,
which declined by 2 percentage points; Taiwan, down 2 percentage points; China,
down 4 percentage points; and Indonesia down 3 percentage points.
The CLSA report favorably noted how in
June 2011, the government passed the Governance Act, which created a new body to
oversee 157 government-owned or -controlled corporations. It also noted how a
new bankruptcy law was enacted.
“What is still lacking, however, is solid
evidence among many companies that their approach to corporate governance is
more than a compliance exercise imposed on them by regulators, who still lack
the resources and firepower to enforce better corporate behavior,” the report
said.
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