Although I have spent the last few weeks studying the
responses to the BEIS inquiry into corporate governance, John
Kay's submission has only just been posted on the web site. I
wanted to cheer when I read it. He has expressed my own thoughts very cogently.
Here are my favourite bits:
"Public policy discussion, and in particular our regulatory
structures, demonstrate very little recognition of … changes in the nature of
capital, business and the relationship between the two."
"...the existing structure of financial reporting must
come into question. There are wide differences across industries and
activities in the relevant metrics of performance and the appropriate time
frame for these metrics The attempt to impose a standard reporting
template across the whole corporate sector has led in practice to very lengthy
corporate reports, much of which consists of boiler plate, and which often
conceal rather that highlight relevant information. The recent emphasis
on narrative reporting is a helpful step away from this, but there is
difficulty in ensuring that such reporting is substantive rather than
platitudinous. The accounting firms and accounting standards bodies have
a principal role to play in elaborating what is good and bad in narrative
reporting, but such material is by its nature subjective and qualitative, and
not readily amenable to prescriptive regulation."
The Annual Report has naturally been the company’s principal
means of communication with the wider public. That most large companies
produce other documents with this aim is an indicator that the doorstop Annual
Report no longer serves this purpose. In practice, most companies now
communicate with the public through their website, and some such websites are
well constructed and informative.
Root and branch reform of financial reporting is needed,
paying close attention to how business activities can best be communicated and
reflecting that regulatory requirements need to be sufficiently flexible
to accommodate the wide variety of such activities and the
organisations in which they take place. This could present a new approach
to thinking about the relationships between corporate governance, corporate
reporting and the role and practice of auditing. The idea that corporate
reporting should be negotiated between investors and companies echoes the
Cadbury Committee's idea that corporate governance disclosures should be the
basis of a conversation between the same parties.
It would be greatly to the advantage of the accountancy
profession to lead such thinking.
No comments:
Post a Comment