Step up financial reforms, Transparency International tells G20

Step up financial reforms, Transparency International tells G20

Transparency International, the global
corruption watchdog, wants member nations of the Group of 20 (G20) to
step up their efforts towards sustained financial sector reforms
against the background of growing corruption and negative impact on
economic recovery efforts.

Ahead of the
group’s two-day annual Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors
meetings, which begins today in Washington D.C., United States of
America, the global anti-corruption body stated that reforms would
entrench ethical corporate governance in the face of growing prevalence
of financial frauds in the financial institutions of most members of
the group.

Good corporate
governance, according to its Chairman, Huguette Labelle, is critical to
sustainable financial institutions, adding that the integration of good
governance and anti-corruption measures are critical to the
sustainability and effectiveness of the reform measures.

“The time to act is
now to entrench good corporate governance culture. It is two years
since the onset of the financial crisis and the critically needed
reforms to protect the general public from fraud must be fully
implemented. The current scandals underline the need for better
oversight and efficient law enforcement,” he said.

Group’s resolutions

Mr. Labelle
recalled the group’s resolution calling on G20 members to ensure that
they implemented the financial regulations outlined at the end of its
meeting in 2008 as the main structural solutions to averting future
economic crises, warning that the complexities in new regulations on
derivative trading, hedge funds, “too big to fail” institutions or
prudential standards should not be a reason for any delay.

Stressing the need
for regulatory agencies to strengthen the transparency of all financial
products marketed to investors, the global body said this would ensure
clear requirements for comprehensive disclosure, and prevent abuses of
off-balance sheet instruments, while individuals and firms would be
sanctioned for fraud.

“Lack of corporate
governance, weak ethics and poor regulation was at the heart of the
financial crisis. This should not be allowed to happen again. Any
corporate communication to investors and to the general public should
be designed to inform them, and not to purposely sell weak products or
publish dressed up quarterly figures.

“If anyone has any
doubt about the urgent need for the G-20 to make integrity a crucial
issue in global financial reform, then they just have to look at
today’s newspaper headlines,” Mr. Labelle said.

World Bank statistics

Available World
Bank statistics, according to Mr. Labelle, indicates that the global
financial meltdown last year directly prevented over 50 million people
in the developing world from escaping abject poverty, adding that the
Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors should use the occasion of
this week’s meeting to consider a comprehensive analysis of the G20
Action Plan to forestall a repeat of the global economic crisis.

As part of efforts
to entrench corporate governance in the nation’s financial system, the
Board of Directors of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) late last week
rolled out an amendment of prudential guidelines on loan loss
provisioning first issued in 1990, prescribing a set of minimum
requirements for banks and other financial institutions.

The apex bank’s
governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, said the review became necessary
bearing in mind the current dynamics in the industry to provide
measurement for loans, establishment of loan losses allowances, credit
risk disclosure and related matters.

The approved
amendment recognizes ‘Specialized Loans’ and ‘Other Loans’ as the two
provisioning categories, with the former using time-based approach,
while the current prudential guidelines for specific loans loss
provisions shall continue to be applied to other loans type.

According to Mr.
Sanusi, the time-based approach establishes longer time lines for
measuring asset quality, based on the gestational periods for projects
in sectors of the economy such as small and medium enterprises (SMEs),
agriculture and infrastructure.

The ‘Specialized
Loans’ comprise mortgage loans, margin loans, object finance, project
finance, real estate loans, SME loans and others, including corporate,
commercial and retail loans, advances, overdrafts, commercial papers,
bankers acceptances, bills discounted, leases, guarantees and other
contingencies connected with a bank’s credit risks.

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