Indian firms perform best in BRICS: corruption watchdog
Indian firms perform best in BRICS: corruption watchdog
By Stephen Brown
BERLIN |
Thu Oct 17, 2013 12:22pm IST
(Reuters) - The anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International has
admonished Chinese companies for their opaque business practices while
praising Indian firms' relatively high standards, in a survey of
emerging market multinationals released on Thursday.
China got the lowest rating of the BRICS
economies (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), whose
companies made up three quarters of the total sample in the survey of
100 of the fastest-growing multinationals in 16 emerging economies.
Indian firms performed the best.
Marked
on how transparently they present measures to combat corruption, how
they report on their organisations and how they disclose data like
revenue, expenditure and taxes, three quarters of the companies scored
less than five out of 10.
"As
emerging market companies expand their influence they should seize the
opportunity to play a bigger role stopping corruption internationally,"
said Huguette Labelle, head of the Berlin-based independent pressure
group.
Widespread shortcomings
included the failure of about 60 percent of all the companies surveyed
to disclose information about their political contributions.
"Results
show that companies from China lag behind in every dimension with an
overall score of 20 percent," Transparency said in the report.
"Considering their growing influence in markets around the world, this
poor performance is of concern."
Eight
of the 10 worst-performing companies were Chinese, such as state-owned
Chery Automobile Co Ltd, which along with Mexico's privately-owned
consumer goods group Mabe scored zero points.
Wang
Wei, a spokesman for Chery, said that he had never heard of
Transparency International and was never contacted by the organisation.
"Chery
is not publicly traded, so naturally it is not as transparent as those
listed companies," Wang said, noting that the automaker does publish
quarterly and annual results to its bond investors.
Pablo
Moreno, Mabe's corporate affairs director, said the report did not
fairly reflect the company's control and transparency mechanisms because
it was based on information available on company websites. As a private
company, Mabe is not obliged to publicly reveal information related to
its business activities, but complies with strict ethics and
accountability codes, he added.
Transparency
said Indian firms perform best in the BRICS with a result of 54 percent
and several occupy the top positions in the overall index, attributing
this to laws in India about how multinationals must report on
subsidiaries.
Top of the class overall came India's Tata Communications Ltd (TATA.NS), which also topped the anti-corruption programmes category with 92 percent, followed by three more Tata companies.
A Tata Communications representative was not immediately able to comment.
Transparency
International said public disclosure of anti-bribery measures "confirms
a company's commitment to ethical conduct" and made it easier for the
public to monitor them.
Emirates
Airline, which is state-owned, came first in the category for
organisational transparency, followed by Johnson Electric Holdings Ltd (0179.HK) of China and Malaysian state energy company Petronas.
Emirates, Johnson Electric and Petronas were not immediately available to comment.
This
category marked firms on their disclosure of data like majority and
minority holdings, percentages owned by the parent company and the
country of incorporation and operation - all of which is often made
"deliberately opaque for the purpose of hiding the proceeds of
corruption", Transparency said.
Eleven companies scored zero in this category, nine of them incorporated in China.
In
the third category measuring standards of country-by-country reporting
of revenues, capital expenditure, income before tax, income tax and
community contributions, the Chilean retailing group Falabella scored
highest with 50 percent.
Sandro
Solari, Falabella's chief executive officer, said transparency was "a
central element in building trust" and it would continue strengthening
its ability to deliver information.
"Key
financial data give citizens the possibility to understand the
activities of a particular company in their country and to monitor the
appropriateness of their payments to governments," said Transparency.
In
a sub-index ranking just the BRICS nations, which the watchdog said
account for 20 percent of global economic output and 15 percent of world
trade, the companies from first-placed India were followed by South
Africa, Russia, Brazil, then China.
(Reporting
by Stephen Brown; Additional reporting by Niluksi Koswanage in KUALA
LUMPUR, Antonio de la Jara in SANTIAGO, Alice Woodhouse in HONG KONG,
Devidutta Tripathy in NEW DELHI, Norihiko Shirouzu in BEIJING, and Tomas
Sarmiento in MEXICO CITY; Editing by Emily Kaiser and Michael Urquhart)
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