Abstract

South African state-owned enterprises (SOEs) form a critical cog in the state machinery. The significance of sound corporate governance has become more pronounced as citizens demand more accountability and value in the use of public resources (Vicente, 2020). The paper utilised a qualitative desktop approach, a case study design and thematic analysis to investigate board and executive management practices in the North West Development Corporation (NWDC) corporate governance, factors hindering good corporate governance and lastly recommendations that can be offered to enhance good corporate governance. The NWDC is a regional development finance institution in South Africa, which over the years has continued to implement adverse audit outcomes (AGSA, 2019b). The thematic analysis findings revealed a direct relationship between lack of consequence management and the state of poor corporate governance in the NWDC. The lack of ethical leadership lies at the heart of this morass of SOEs in general. The study, therefore, recommends the full implementation of the existing legislative framework, the Codes on Good Governance and the anti-corruption national strategy in order to inculcate accountability in the South African public agencies that include the NWDC. The paper is relevant in addressing the Auditor-General qualified audits, which underlines the ineffectiveness of the existing SOE governance system by not inherently correlating corporate success with the presence of deeper corporate governance standards and ethical behaviour.

Highlights

  • The ongoing disclosures at the Zondo Commission of Inquiry into State Capture continue to send shockwaves through the public regarding the degree of corruption (AFP, 2019)

  • The study adds to the literature by exploring the extent to which corporate governance codes and practices have been observed in the North West Development Corporation (NWDC), identify corporate governance implementation challenges faced by the NWDC and recommending strategies and mechanisms for enhancing good corporate governance in the NWDC. It addresses the forecast of the Auditor-General which underlines the ineffectiveness of the existing state-owned enterprises (SOEs) governance system by not inherently correlating corporate success with the presence of deeper corporate governance standards and ethical behaviour

  • The paper utilised a qualitative desktop approach drawing on an extensive review of literature from solicited documents on corporate governance in South Africa‘s SOEs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The ongoing disclosures at the Zondo Commission of Inquiry into State Capture continue to send shockwaves through the public regarding the degree of corruption (AFP, 2019). The risks and realities of governance collapse have been experienced in South African state-owned firms and some businesses, these is a need for governance checks and balances in both public and private companies. The public debt of South Africa, including that of its state-owned enterprises (SOEs), rose from R250 billion (US$16 million) in 1992, reaching R900 billion (US$60 million) in 2009, to R3.1 trillion (US$204 billion) in 2018 Any conflict that arises among these stakeholders has to be settled through trade-offs. The former perspective is termed the stakeholder theory of corporate governance (CG) The former perspective is termed the stakeholder theory of corporate governance (CG) (Clarke, 2004, p. 173)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call