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COVID-19 : quelles conséquences pour le futur de la gouvernance ?

Belle tribune de Yvan Allaire et Mihaela Firsirotu dans Financial Post : « What post-pandemic corporate governance might look like » (1er mai 2020).

Extrait :

Another challenge for boards of directors will come from the mood of the population as we emerge from the pandemic. Some flaws and irritants in our current economic system may well become intolerable. For instance, the expectation of continuous growth in earnings per share, the cost-driven global search for the cheapest labour and the disparity in income within both corporations and society may all come in for criticism and calls for reform.

Boards of directors need to be alert to early warnings of impending political and social disturbances, which may be harbingers of the next flock of black swans. If they do not effectively handle these new expectations, they can expect governments now flush with power to seize the initiative regarding work arrangements, executive compensation, wealth-sharing, offshoring, and so forth.

Contrary to what might be expected given the serious financial issues many businesses will face, the recent infatuation of large institutional shareholders with ESG (Environment, Social, Governance) drivers and their corollary, the stakeholder model of the corporation, is unlikely to abate. Too much wind already in those sails and new gusts from the pandemic will lead to calls for even swifter compliance by publicly traded corporations.

Management and boards should act pre-emptively in five areas. The corporation’s access to critical supplies should be closely monitored. All past decisions to outsource and off-shore operations in low-cost countries need to be reviewed and re-assessed.

Work arrangements should be adapted to post-pandemic circumstances, as well as to people’s legitimate quest for work balance and couples’ desire for burden sharing. Though doing so will be hard, boards also need to cut the Gordian knot of executive compensation and set an acceptable ratio of top management compensation to the salary of the median employee.

As most large institutional funds have become advocates of ESG, management and the board should make clear to shareholders what this and the above adjustments will mean for the management, governance and performance of the company.

In the end, the powerful forces of continuity, habit and normalcy may bring us back to the status quo ante. We may wake up from this nightmare unscathed. Perhaps! But a board of directors should not take such a “happy ending” for granted.

À la prochaine…