Assignment – 1
There are three primary directions you can take on the first paper; 1) the explanation and history behind the corporate governance system in any country other than the United States, United Kingdom, Germany or Japan. Do some research and consider how they have developed their own unique approach to corporate governance given the culture, religion, tax code, legal structure and history of how their businesses developed. They might have modified one of the general structures of the above four countries or they may have taken off in their own direction. You want to think about how the governance structure originated and how it is applied in the country’s unique environment.
APA FORMAT SHOULD BE FOLLOWED
1/17/18, 12(41 PMThe Evolution of Corporate Governance in China | RAND
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Abstract
Although China’s economy has grown
rapidly in recent years and investment
in its stock markets has soared,
corporate governance institutions
remain nascent. A RAND report
analyzes the evolution of Chinese
corporate governance, describing recent
reforms that have created Western-style
oversight mechanisms. It also identifies
obstacles to reform that stem from the
continued prevalence of state
ownership, and recommends policies
that will help address those obstacles so
that China can move toward
international standards of corporate
governance.
RAND > Published Research > Research Briefs > RB-9405 >
The Evolution of Corporate Governance
in China
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China’s economic reforms have fueled rapid
economic growth in the past three decades. At the
same time, the Chinese have developed policies to
create Western-style oversight mechanisms and
corporate governance, in an effort to improve
public confidence in their markets at home and
abroad. Despite this progress, however, corporate
governance mechanisms in China remain weak. A
2003 study by the World Economic Forum ranked
China 44th out of 49 countries surveyed in terms of
quality of corporate governance.
A 2008 RAND report titled Chinese Corporate
Governance: History and Institutional Framework
describes the recent history of corporate
governance institutions in China, identifies
obstacles to the evolution of best practices in this
area, and recommends policies to promote
RESEARCH
B R I E F�
OBJECTIVE ANALYSIS.
EFFECTIVE SOLUTIONS.
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Market Capitalization of the Shanghai and
Shenzhen Stock Exchanges
SOURCE: Wind Data, one of the
largest providers of data on Chinese
financial markets. See
http://www.wind.com/en/home.html.
improvement.
Emergence of Corporate Governance
Until recently, the government controlled almost every aspect of China’s economy, and most
enterprises were state-owned. In the 1990s, China took the first steps toward modern
corporate governance by establishing the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges and by
creating a new government body — the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) — to
regulate its new stock market. The next 10 years saw the emergence of a modern enterprise
structure, as China passed its first Company Law, delineating the rights and responsibilities
of corporations. Notably, investments in Chinese stock markets surged during this period (see
figure). But despite these reforms, state shareholders still enjoyed overwhelming favoritism
over individual investors. In 2006, China implemented the first of several new policies
intended to address the continuing power imbalance between state and individual
shareholders.
To describe the current status of corporate governance in China, the report identifies two sets
of institutional entities: those internal to companies and those external to them. The inner
circle of governance consists of shareholders’ general meetings, boards of directors and
boards of supervisors, and management personnel. The outer circle includes regulators
(primarily the CSRC), the stock exchanges, the Chinese legal system, the auditing system, and
institutional investors. The report describes the roles of each of these entities in shaping
corporate governance in modern China.
Obstacles to Progress
1. Overwhelming concentration of state
ownership. Two-thirds of companies
listed in the Shanghai Stock Exchange are
state enterprises, a legacy of the state-
controlled economy. This problem is the
source of many of the other obstacles to
progress listed here, such as lack of
independence of boards of directors and
insider trading. It also has the effect of
diverting resources away from
companies, reducing the liquidity of the
capital markets, and discouraging
1/17/18, 12(41 PMThe Evolution of Corporate Governance in China | RAND
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NOTE: RMB=renminbi, the Chinese
currency
minority investors from engaging in long-
term investment. Recent reforms have
improved protection of minority
shareholders, but it remains difficult for them to disagree with state shareholders.
2. A direct result of ownership concentration is the lack of independence among boards of
directors. Members of both corporate boards of directors and boards of supervisors are
typically selected and removed by the dominant owner of the company, which is often
the Chinese government. As a result, directors are likely to be impeded in carrying out
fiduciary duties, and supervisors are less likely to be able to exert independence from
the board of directors and senior managers.
3. Rampant insider trading. Because so many Chinese enterprises are state-owned, with
nontradable shares, insiders at many of these companies have made fortunes on stock
offerings. This problem is so widespread that one well-known Chinese economist once
called the stock markets “a casino without rules” The problem is exacerbated by the
absence of a well-defined concept of “fiduciary duty” and by weak enforcement
provisions under Chinese law.
4. Weak mechanisms to control false financial disclosures. Corporate fabrication of
financial reports is a serious problem in China. Although steps are being taken to change
a business culture that has long tolerated corruption, weaknesses in the accounting
profession, the media, and the courts undermine reform. The accounting profession has
little independence from management and suffers from a severe shortage of qualified
auditors. Although the media has made progress in exposing corporate fraud, journalists
are often hired through a process that is influenced by senior corporate officials.
Securities litigation did not appear in China until 2001, when the Supreme People’s
Court of China developed a framework for investors to sue listed companies for losses
caused by false financial disclosures. But even today, the process is slow and
cumbersome. About 1,000 suits have been filed against 14 companies, but most remain in
legal limbo and none has yet been settled by the court in favor of investors.
5. Finally, China continues to suffer from immature capital markets, characterized by the
Chinese banks’ preferential treatment of state-owned enterprises, difficulties in issuing
corporate bonds, and the absence of an over-the-counter securities market and
corporate debt market.
Future Prospects and Recommendations
[1]
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Despite these problems, the report’s authors are optimistic about the evolution of corporate
governance in China. They point to the increasing globalization of listed companies, such as
those listed in Hong Kong, as a trend that has helped align those companies with
international standards of governance. They also point to the new government policy
allowing mainland Chinese citizens to invest in non-mainland stock markets, a move that will
force mainland enterprises to compete with their Hong Kong counterparts for investors. Also,
as China’s market economy matures, it will stimulate the development of more experienced
personnel who are badly needed to serve as company managers, independent directors, and
certified public accountants.
To overcome the obstacles to better corporate governance, the authors recommended a
number of policy options. These include better defining the functions of supervisory boards,
making it easier for investors to sue management, and toughening the punishment for insider
trading — all steps that have been recommended by other experts. The authors also suggest
reviving the now-banned regional over-the-counter markets, establishing an incentive
mechanism to encourage reporting of insider trading, and promulgating the concept of
fiduciary responsibility.
[1] Older CTL facilities continue to operate in South Africa, but key parts of their technology
are considered obsolete today.
Read the Full Report
This research brief describes work done for the Center for Corporate Ethics and Governance within the RAND Institute for
Civil Justice and documented in Chinese Corporate Governance: History and Institutional Framework by Yong Kang, Lu Shi,
and Elizabeth D. Brown, TR-618-RC, 2008, 60 pp., ISBN: 978-0-8330-4611-6. (Full Document).
This research brief was written by Laura Zakaras.
This product is part of the RAND Corporation research brief series. RAND research briefs present policy-oriented summaries
of individual published, peer-reviewed documents or of a body of published work.
Copyright © 2008 RAND Corporation
The RAND Corporation is a nonprofit research organization providing objective analysis and effective solutions that address
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opinions of its research clients and sponsors.
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1/17/18,12(31 PMGovernance in China – OECD
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OECD Home Directorate for Public Governance Governance in China
Governance in China
Synthesis (in Chinese ) | Table of Contents (in Chinese ) | How to Order
Governance is the next issue to tackle on the development path of the People’s Republic of China. Further adapting institutions and the functioning of the state to an increasingly market-oriented economy is
crucial to maintain economic dynamism. Governance reform is also fundamental to address emerging strains related to rising inequalities and environmental deterioration. This report goes beyond the general
statement that governance matters. It shows how, in practice, governance impacts on public action by looking at different policy sectors, such as agriculture, higher education, labour market and social
protection, foreign investment, environment protection, collection of statistics, protection of intellectual property rights, banking and tax collection. The study also takes stock of the progress made in public
management and public finance and explores policy options for the future. Further redefining the role of the state, modernising public management, adjusting the relations between levels of government and
consolidating the institutional framework for market forces are four directions in which reform efforts should be pursued.
Synthesis
Governance is recognised as critical to economic development and the achievement of a society’s objectives. OECD member countries target a development path built on three pillars: good governance,
economic growth and social cohesion. Good governance is thus seen as a crucial element to address challenges and fault lines facing a nation and to ensure sustainable development. China is now undergoing
a crucial transformation in its system of governance, adapting institutions and the functioning of the state to an increasingly market-oriented economy. This transformation is also being spurred by key strains
that have emerged related to fiscal and financial imbalances, rising inequalities and environmental deterioration. In 2003, the OECD initiated a project to share with China the expertise of its member countries on
governance issues. The China Governance Project was also the opportunity to better understand the challenges faced by China and to organise policy dialogues on these issues. This project was undertaken in
the framework of the programme of co-operation between the OECD and China, initiated in 1996. It thus benefited from a relationship of mutual trust established between the OECD Secretariat and Chinese
ministries and bodies in many areas.
Table of Contents
Part I – Public Sector Management
Chapter 1. Civil Service Reform in China.
The Chinese Government has undertaken extensive reforms to its civil service system over the past 10 years. These have encompassed recruitment and selection, training, appraisal, rewards and punishments,
compensation, discipline and other areas. This chapter reviews each of these elements. The chapter argues that the capacity of the civil service has improved during the past 10 years. But the capacity
improvements may be explained by reasons other than civil service reform, such as by improvements in China’s system of education. The rapid expansion of higher education since 1980 has produced a large
population that is eligible for civil service employment.
Chapter 2. The Reform of Public Service Units: Challenges and Perspectives .
China’s large and diverse sector of “public service units” (PSUs – shiye danwei) is a galaxy of public service providers operating alongside core government and separate from other state-owned or state-
sponsored organisations such as state-owned enterprises (SOEs), state-owned financial institutions and state-sponsored “social organisations”. Following on from the reform of SOEs and core government, the
reform of PSUs represents the third major step of reforms that aim at transforming the organisational structure of the public sector into one that assists the socialist market economy.
Chapter 3. Fighting Corruption in China
Corruption has been openly recognised as an emerging challenge to China’s economic and social reform. In 2002, then President Jiang Zemin defined “anti-corruption mechanisms” as a “major political task for
the Party”. Incumbent President Hu Jintao has declared the fight against corruption a priority on the political agenda of his government, as corruption threatens both the economic development and the political
and social stability of the People’s Republic of China (PRC). This chapter tracks the development of corruption, analyses the causes for its perceived or real expansion, as well as reforms and policies that the
Chinese authorities have adopted in response.
Chapter 4. E-government in China
E-government refers to the use of information and communication technologies, and particularly the Internet, as a tool to achieve better government. In China, the state of e-government reflects the transitional
nature of contemporary Chinese society toward a “socialist market economy”. The country’s information society is inchoate with persisting digital divides, i.e. diffusion and access to information and
communication technologies (ICT) are uneven and although Internet penetration has grown rapidly in wealthy urban areas, it remains fairly low in per capita terms.
Chapter 5. Institutional Arrangements for the Production of Statistics
Chinese statistics have come a long way from a pure reporting system in a centrally planned economy to a system that increasingly relies on surveys and modern statistical techniques to service users, be they
government or the public at large. Nonetheless, many challenges remain. In recent years, the quality of Chinese economic statistics, in particular the growth rate of real GDP and other data has been repeatedly
questioned by several Chinese and western authors. Questions about data quality inevitably lead to questions about the institutional organisation of China’s statistical authority and the methods of statistical
data compilation in China.
Part II – Public Finance
Chapter 6. Governance in Taxation in China
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With its transition to a market-oriented economy, China has gone through major tax reforms in the last two decades. Significant measures to improve governance in taxation were implemented, including
unifying tax laws, equalizing tax burdens, simplifying the tax system, rationalizing the decentralized system and standardizing revenue allocation methods between the central and local governments. However,
more needs to be done to improve China’s tax system so that transparency, stability and the rule of law become the guiding principles.
Chapter 7. Public Sector Budgeting Issues in China
China has undertaken extensive reforms to its budgeting system over the past 10 years. These have encompassed the entire budgeting cycle: formulation, approval, implementation and audit. This chapter
reviews each of these elements. China has made crucial progress in this field. The early challenge was fundamentally to create the institutional infrastructure for a modern budget process where none had
previously existed. In the planned economy, all resource allocation decisions were made in the plan with the budget serving essentially as a secondary accounting device.
Chapter 8. China’s Public Expenditure Policies
China’s evolution from a centrally planned to a market-based economy has led to major transformations of its public expenditure policies. Significant progress has been made in raising spending on
infrastructure to a level more in line with China’s development needs, in improving mechanisms for expenditure budgeting and planning, notably by bringing some extra-budgetary accounts into the main
budget. Nevertheless, significant problems remain.
Part III – Institutional Framework for Market Forces
Chapter 9. Regulatory Management and Reform in China
China’s potential benefits from regulatory reform are significant, as is the potential downside if a number of serious regulatory problems are not addressed. This chapter reviews China’s recent efforts to improve
regulatory capacities and to build a regulatory environment on the basis of the rule of law.
Chapter 10. Reforming State Asset Management and Improving Corporate: Governance: The Two Challenges of Chinese
Enterprise Reform
Enterprise reform in China is facing two main but interwoven challenges: on the one hand, to establish the state as a full or part-owner of enterprises rather than as a manager, and on the other hand, to improve
corporate governance in general, and of listed companies in particular.
Chapter 11. Labour Protection: Challenges Facing Labour Offices and Social Insurance
One of the key institutional outcomes of China’s economic reforms has been to create a new role for employers that is separate from the state and allows enterprises to concentrate on their business. To protect
workers, the government has set up public institutions for many social and administrative functions that until recently pertained to work units (danwei) or did not exist. This chapter focuses on three such
functions for which the 1994 Labour Law makes the government responsible: employment services, labour inspection and social insurance.
Chapter 12. Competition Law and Policy in China
This chapter focuses on two issues, namely: i) the enactment of a general competition law that would provide a coherent basis for combating localism and other “monopolistic” conduct by enterprises and local
governments; and ii) the adoption of a “national competition policy” calling upon all parts and levels of government to incorporate competition policy into all aspects of proposed and existing laws and policies
that affect market conduct. These two issues were identified in the 2002 OECD study China in the World Economy: The Domestic Policy Challenges and will here be discussed from a governance perspective.
Chapter 13. Governance of Banks in China
The conceptual framework for governance in banking reflects the special role of banks in a market economy. In order for the bank to act as a profit-oriented corporation, it must have genuine owners and the
corporate governance regime should enable the owners to hold the management accountable for achieving a competitive return at acceptable risk. At the same time, banks have fiduciary obligations to
depositors and also perform many “public good” functions such as acting as repository of savings, supplying currency and allocating resources in the real economy. Therefore, banks operate in a regulated
environment.
Chapter 14. Intellectual Property Rights in China: Governance Challenges and Prospects
Today, top leaders in the Chinese Government have become aware of the importance for China to build a sound intellectual property rights (IPR) system. While accession to the WTO has opened new
opportunities for the Chinese economy, it has also exposed Chinese firms to greater international competition under the WTO rules, including Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). This
means that the government and Chinese industry need to learn as quickly as possible how to play by the new “rules of the game”. Indeed, Chinese leaders are realising that the protection of intellectual rights is
crucial not only as a condition for foreign investment and technology transfer, but also for promoting Chinese innovation, which will determine China’s future competitiveness in the global knowledge economy.
China has thus, over the past two decades, quickly developed a set of IPR laws and regulations that are today basically in conformity with international practice and standards. The main challenge for the
coming years is to improve upon the governance of the legislative, administrative and enforcement systems in order to make the existing laws more effective in stimulating innovation and protecting IPR.
Chapter 15. The Governance Challenges of Foreign Investment Policy in China
Foreign investment has played a major part in economic development and economic growth in China. When economic reforms commenced in the late 1970s, there was no framework for foreign investment.
Thus, existing government structures were adapted and legislation created anew in the form of separate legislative enactments for each form of foreign-invested enterprise (FIE). China has subsequently
received large quantities of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the past quarter of a century, rising to nearly USD 55 billion in 2004.
Chapter 16. Institutional Framework for Effective Agricultural Policy: Current Issues and Future Challenges
Since reforms began in 1978, China’s agricultural sector has been transformed from a centralized system of commune-based farming into a household-based system. China’s leaders are de-emphasizing formal
planning and are increasingly accepting allocation by markets. However, agriculture remains a sensitive area and is subject to intervention. This chapter describes the main institutions dealing with agricultural
policies, with some suggestions for next steps in the reform process.
Part IV – Ensuring Sustainable Development
Chapter 17. Environment and Governance in China
China has made remarkable progress in sustaining high economic growth rates, raising incomes and lengthening life expectancy. However, the pattern of economic growth, rapid industrialization and
urbanization has not been environmentally sustainable. These processes have generated high pressures on the environment, including surface and ground waters, air in urban areas, land and natural resources.
This in turn has adversely affected human health and the productivity of natural resources. If the state of the environment continues to deteriorate, these problems will intensify and the potential for maintaining
economic growth may be undermined.
Chapter 18. Higher Education – Finance and Quality
In its quest to become a major player in the global market, China has made impressive strides in many domains, not least in the area of higher education. The Chinese Government recognizes the key role of
education in realizing its goals in other domains, and the Ninth Five-Year Plan (1996-2000) and the current Tenth Five-Year Plan (2001-06) have seen enrolment in tertiary institutions more than double from 9.4
million in 2000 to 20 million in 2004. It has also witnessed the rapid rise in the number of non-government (min ban) institutions that compete with the older, better-established state ones.
Figure 4.2 Types of information provided by China’s e-government web sites (%)
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Governance in China – Synthesis in Chinese
Governance in China – Table of Content in Chinese
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Electroniccopy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1233070
1
A Review of Corporate Governance in China
Larry Li*, RMIT University
Tony Naughton, RMIT University
Martin Hovey, University of Southern Queensland
Abstract
The 2005 policy decision to change the status of non-tradable state and non-state shares
into tradable A shares ushers in a new era in the stock markets of China. Over time all of
these shares will be tradable and potentially transferred to foreign and domestic private
sector investors. These changes have the potential to significantly alter the monitoring
and control of the majority of listed firms that until now have been controlled by tightly
held blockholders of non-tradable shares. It is therefore timely to reassess the corporate
governance of Chinese listed firms. This paper reviews the theoretical and empirical
corporate governance literature in China.
*
The corresponding author. School of Economics, Finance and Marketing, RMIT University, Victoria
3000, Australia. Tel: 61-3-9925 5638, E-mail: larry.li@rmit.edu.au.
Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1233070
2
A Review of Corporate Governance in China
1. Introduction
China’s long period of programmatic reforms initiated in the late 1970s appears now to
be more focused on market reform in the post-WTO environment and the opening of the
financial sector to greater foreign competition.
In the late of 1970s, China initiated an extended period of pragmatic reform ushering in a
period of dynamic economic growth The restructuring of the economy and the resulting
efficiency gains have contributed to a more than tenfold increase in GDP since 1978, and
in China becoming the second-largest economy in the world after the US in 2006, when
measured on a purchasing power parity (PPP) basis (CIA, 2007). The Economist (2008)
reports that China’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 11.4 percent year-on-year to
24.66 trillion Yuan (3.43 trillion U.S. dollars) in 2007. To achieve this goal, over the past
three decades China has dramatically changed many aspects of its economy. Corporate
governance, being a major aspect of the corporate reform program, is not an unfamiliar to
investors in China. The reform of the corporate governance system is now recognised as a
vital component of the success of the economic reform in China.
In defining corporate governance in China, Clarke (2006) considers it as the set of rules
and practices regulating relationships among participants in post-traditional
1
Chinese
business enterprise and that which governs decision making within that enterprise.
Corporate governance in China tends to regulate relationships among all parties with
interest in the business organization. Although post-traditional enterprises are no longer
as tightly controlled by the state as they once were, most Chinese studies pay more
attention to the two primary types of firms in China: state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and
publicly held companies (PHCs). This paper reviews Chinese corporate governance and
will focus on PHCs while recognising the bulk of listed firms remain within the control
of the state either directly or indirectly. .
1
A post-traditional enterprise is an enterprise hat is no longer tightly controlled by the state through the
traditional planning system
3
This chapter is organized as follows: Section 2 contains a review of corporate
governance. Section 3 provides the information of corporate governance research in
China. Section 4 briefly explains the two corporate governance codes in China. Section
5
describes issues with current corporate governance system in China. Finally, a summary
and the conclusions are presented in Section 6.
2. Review of Corporate Governance
Recent corporate scandals around the world have highlighted deficiencies in corporate
governance systems. The impact of these business events has forced a radical
reassessment of how companies are directed. Mallin (2004) argues that corporate
governance is a relatively new and evolving area and its development has been affected
by theories from a number of disciplines including finance, economics, accounting, law,
management, and organizational behaviour. The types of questions raised when we
consider corporate governance are: How do investors secure a return on their investment?
What is the proper level of authority for management in making business decisions?
What is the appropriate level of residual rights allocated to managers? How do investors
make sure that managers are not self-serving, nor misappropriate the assets? How do
shareholders influence strategic decisions and the business operations of the company?
How do investors influence managers’ behaviour? None of these questions are easy to
answer, because none of the existing corporate governance models can resolve all these
issues completely.
Shleifer and Vishny’s (1997) paper is regarded as the first major attempt to consolidate
the key theoretical influences on corporate governance. Their paper examines the overall
corporate governance system around the world, and investigates investors’ protection and
ownership concentration in particular. They posit that the key element of corporate
governance is to provide good returns to investors on their financial investment.
Therefore, legal protection of investor rights is considered one of the key issues of
corporate governance, and countries with good corporate governance systems usually
provide relatively better protection to investors. There is a prevailing view that strong
legal protection of investor interest has made diffuse ownership feasible under the
4
common-law system, such as in US, UK and commonwealth countries (La Porta et al.
1998). In non common-law countries, legal protection for investor interests is typically
vested with concentrated, rather than diffuse ownership (Gul and Zhao, 2000).
Generally speaking, corporate governance has been classified into two major categories:
internal and external governance (Denis and McConnell, 2003; Gillan, 2006). Internal
governance normally includes features of boards of directors, ownership and control, and
managerial incentive mechanisms. On the other hand, external governance covers issues
relate to the external market and government policies and regulations (Gillan, 2006).
Denis and McConnell (2003) provide an excellent summary of corporate governance
research. They posit that there are two major generations of corporate governance
research. The first research generation focused on the internal governance mechanism,
and tried to determine whether these internal mechanises, such as board of directors,
executive compensation and ownership and control, affect firm performance in individual
countries. The second generation is more likely to consider the influence from external
forces, such as market and legal and regulatory issues, on the structure and effectiveness
of corporate governance around the world. The research of the second generation begins
with the work of La Porta et al. (1998). Researchers now pay more attention to the
relationship between the legal system and corporate governance mechanisms.
Recently, corporate governance has received much attention in Asia, particularly after the
1997 Asia financial crisis. Johnson et al. (2000) point out that poor corporate governance
had a significant effect on the extent of currency deprecations and stock market declines
in the Asian crisis. Their findings indicate that countries with weak legal protection of
shareholder rights and poor enforcement were more susceptible to a fall in asset values
and a collapse of the exchange rate. Eiteman et al. (2001) also support the notion that a
weak corporate governance system was one of the major causes of the Asian financial
crisis. The importance of legal protection to creditors and minority shareholders is also
emphasized by La Porta et al. (1997).
Claessens and Fan (2002) provide a comprehensive corporate governance review in Asia
5
and confirm the limited protection of minority rights and highly concentrated ownership
in Asia. Firms are normally controlled by one or more shareholders, thus the separation of
management from ownership is rare and family controlled corporations are prevalent in
East Asian countries. For example, the largest ten families control half of the total value
of listed corporate assets in Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand (Claessens et al. 2000).
Traditionally, some large Korean business groups (Chaebols), such as Hyundai, Samsung
and Daewoo, were also family based (Ehrlich and Kang, 1999). In China, listed
corporations are normally controlled by State and financial institutions, and tradable A-
shares accounts for only a small part of total shares outstanding (Li and Naughton, 2007).
Another interesting phenomenon in Asian countries is a pyramid ownership structure,
which is defined as owning a controlling holding of the stock of one corporation which in
turn holds a controlling interest in another, a process that can be repeated a number of
times (Claessens et al. 2000). This raises some important questions. Why is ownership
concentration more prevalent in East Asian countries? And why is significant corporate
wealth in East Asia concentrated among a few families? Generally speaking, block
ownership is attractive to blockholders when they can attain private benefits from
controlling the firm (Shleifer and Vishny, 1997). On the other hand, investors may feel
confident that their benefits are well protected through block shareholdings, especially in
some countries without well functioning investor protection law and effective
enforcement (La Porta et al., 1999).
Corporate governance issues have come to the fore in China particularly since the late
1970s, because the development of the corporate governance system is recognized as a
vital component of the restructuring of SOEs. Before the economic reforms, Chinese
industry was dominated by state ownership, and SOEs were the major economic
contributors. Managers in SOEs were required to fulfil the production plans specified by
the government rather than maximize the investment returns for the only investor — the
state. The governance structure of SOEs was an integral part of the general government
framework. At that time, SOEs were characterized by low productivity and efficiency,
high input and low output.
6
Since the late 1970s, many trials were carried out to improve the overall financial
performance and work efficiency of SOEs: profit retention, profit contracting and tax on
profit (Liew, 1997). The opening of the Chinese capital market eventually accelerated the
development of corporate governance in China. In addition, the introduction of a set of
Laws provided a legal foundation for SOE reform, including SOE Law, Company Law,
and Securities Law. These laws required corporations to form three statutory corporate
governing bodies: the shareholders, the board of directors, and the board of supervisors.
Shareholders meet at least once per year at the annual meeting as well as special
shareholder meetings to vote on the company’s development strategy, investment plan
and other important issues. The major responsibility of the board of directors is to
minimize the costs that arise from the separation of ownership and decision control of the
modern corporation (Fama and Jensen, 1983). The major function of the board of
supervisors is to supervise directors and senior managers to make sure that they fulfil
their responsibilities. In 2001 and 2004, the authority issued the “Code of Corporate
Governance for Listed Companies in China” and the “Provisional Code of Corporate
Governance for Security Companies”. These two Codes add many features of corporate
governance that exist in some of the major economies of the world. Since China has
become one of the key members in the world economy, it is important to have a deeper
understanding of the current corporate governance system in China and the corporate
governance studies related to the Chinese market. What has been lacking in this process
is a sound theoretical framework to embrace the unique social/practical/economic
environment of China.
3. Corporate Governance Research in China
In recent years, there has been a proliferation of corporate governance literature relating
to China. There are two main streams. The first can be defined as descriptive of practice
of prescriptive tests that recommend forms and best practice, examples include Hovey
and Naughton (2007) and IFC (2005). The second represents more mainstream academic
research exploring the evolution of corporate governance, particularly focusing on the
growing number of listed firms. The literature ranges from traditional quantitative
empirical work (Hovey et al., 2003; Firth et al., 2006; Dahya et al., 2003; Xu and Wang,
7
1999) and predominating qualitative studies that involve surveys and interviews (Mar and
Young, 2001; Tobin, 2005).
3.1 Internal Governance
3.1.1 Board of Directors
Issues related to boards of directors have been well documented. The major responsibility
of board of directors is to minimize costs that arise from the separation of ownership and
decision control of the modern corporation (Fama and Jensen, 1983). The board of
directors receives its authority for internal control and other decisions from the
stockholders of corporations. The major responsibilities of the board are to hire, fire,
monitor and compensate management, and ensure that shareholders’ wealth is
maximized. Traditionally, corporate board research globally has mainly focused on the
relationship between board size (Yermack, 1996; Bhagat and Black, 2002), management
compensation (Core et al., 1999; Martin and Thomas, 2005), board composition
(Rosenstein and Wyatt, 1990; Bhagat and Black, 2002), the separation of CEO and chair
(Bhagat and Black, 2002; Dahya et al., 2002) and firm performance and other strategic
decisions, such as CEO turnover and takeover activities. Hermalin and Weisbach (2003)
provide a comprehensive review in this area.
The findings of empirical research can be summarised as follows: (1) a board with more
outside directors is not associated with superior firm valuation, but is associated with
better decision making, such as CEO appointment, executive compensation, and CEO
turnover; (2) there is no conclusive answer to the relationship between board size, the
separation of CEO and chair, and firm performance. Recently, more attention has been
paid to the evolution and determinates of board size and structure (Lehn, et al., 2003;
Linck et al., 2008), busy boards (Fich and Shivdasani, 2006), and board interlocks
(Larcker et al., 2005) in the corporate governance literature.
Turning to the Chinese studies, Liang and Li (1999) indicate that outside directors are
positively associated with higher returns on investment in China, meanwhile, duality of
titles and board size have no explanatory power on firm performance. Recently, Chen et
8
al. (2006) find that when there is a high proportion of external directors they are less
likely to engage in fraud, which is consistent with the international literature. Chen et al.
(2006) also argue that the combination of CEO and chair tends to lead to higher instances
of fraud. A plausible explanation of this finding is that managers with more power are
likely to abuse their positions and engage in fraudulent activities. However, based on
their findings, Li and Naughton (2007) argue that board size and board composition do
not impact on firm performance. One possible explanation might come from the launch
of new policies and rules in the Chinese stock market in recent years. New policies detail
the regulations covering board independence for all public firms. With the introduction of
the requirement for greater board independence, board size typically increased as a
consequence. Therefore these board variables are no longer distinguishable to investors.
Alternatively, a theoretical explanation could be that the factors are endogenous and
therefore do not have explanatory potential (Harris and Raviv, 2004; Hermalin and
Weisbach, 2003). Clarke (2006) also questions the efficiency of outside directors in
China because the unclear structure and their function is not clearly defined.
Another interesting board topic in China is the role of the supervisory board. Chinese
listed companies adopt a two-tier board structure, a Board of Directors and a Supervisory
Board. Xiao et al. (2004) and Dahya et al. (2003) question the usefulness of the
supervisory board and suggest further improvement of the supervisory board’s
independency and function enforcement. Clarke (2006) also states that the board of
supervisors has been unable to play the monitoring role in Chinese companies simply
because the supervisory board has no significant powers to monitor the daily business
operations and appoint senior management members.
3.1.2 Ownership and Control: State and Institutional Ownership
The relationship between ownership structure and firm performance has been well
documented. Recently, much of the research focuses on the behaviour of blockholders.
Holderness (2003) reports that insiders control approximately 20 percent of the
ownership of listed corporations in the U.S.. La Porta et al. (1998) also posit that
ownership is heavily concentrated in developing economies. Claessens et al. (2000) find
9
that more than two-thirds of firms are controlled by a single shareholder, that the
separation of management from ownership is rare and family controlled corporations are
very common in East Asian countries. Faccio et al. (2001) report that family ownership in
East Asia leads to severe conflicts with other stakeholders and poor firm performance.
However, Anderson and Reeb (2003) argue that family owned firms perform better than
nonfamily owned firms in the well regulated and transparent markets, because family
ownership can reduce agency problems. Denis and McConnell (2003) conclude that
concentrated ownership most often has a positive effect on firm value, in that large-block
shareholders can monitor and control the company’s daily business activities to minimize
agency costs. Holderness (2003) also confirms that block ownership can be motivated by
the benefits of control, such as the decision rights and personal privileges.
In China, the major shareholders are likely to be institutions and the state rather than
individuals, and the majority of publicly traded companies are state-controlled (Claessens
and Fan, 2002). Prior studies have investigated the relationship between state ownership
and firm performance in China, and find that firm accounting performance is negatively
related to the level of direct state ownership (Xu and Wang, 1999; Qi et al. 2000; Hovey
et al. 2003). If the state controls the company, it is not surprising that politicians and
state-controlling owners sit on most board seats. The likelihood of finding a director
representing minority shareholders is very small. The possible explanation of this
phenomenon is that local politicians can use their connections to influence both the
market and the firms under their jurisdictions, because at this stage the Chinese economy
remains relationship-based, and firms can benefit from the services provided by
politicians in creating economic rents and enforcing transactions (Claessens and Fan,
2002). Mallin and Rong (1998) also argue that guanxi (personal relationships) still plays
an important role in business practices in China.
Another unique feature of the Chinese corporate governance model is large institutional
shareholdings. As mentioned above, tradable A-shares only represent a small proportion
of the total shares outstanding. In China, institutional shares, normally referred to as legal
person shares, have two types of holdings: state legal person shares and legal person
10
shares. State legal person shares are shares held by other state owned institutions or
enterprises, and legal person shares are shares held by non-state owned institutions or
enterprises. However, most previous studies treat these two types of ownership as the
same (Xu and Wang, 1999). Private legal person shareholders have distinguishing
characters from state institutional shareholders and individual shareholders. Unlike state
institutional shareholders, they can be assumed to be better motivated and more
concerned with the financial performance of the companies. Moreover, they are elected to
the board of directors and to the supervisory board, rather than being appointed.
Typically they have more working experience in industry than that of state directors.
Besides having voting power on important issues such as the selection of the
management team and dividend policies, they can access corporate inside information
and have the right to question management at any time about operations of the firm. Most
previous studies of the Chinese market that identify legal person institutional holdings
separately from direct state ownership find that holdings by legal persons are positively
related to firm performance (Xu and Wang, 1999; Qi et al. 2000; Chen and Gong, 2000;
Hovey et al. 2003).
Besides state, legal person, and tradable A-shares, Chinese stock companies also have
employee shares, management shares and foreign shares. However, not many studies
consider the influence of these types of shares, because normally these shares only
account for a very small proportion of the total share outstanding, or only a few
companies have these types of shares. Moreover, overseas investors can become holders
of non-tradable shares through share issues by Chinese stock companies, but these shares
are even less common than shares made to foreign investors of tradable shares. One of
the major reasons might be that free market style mergers and acquisitions are not
allowed. Xu and Wang (1999) indicate that there is no active takeover market in China.
All major mergers and acquisitions are engineered by the state.
3.1.3 Managerial Incentives
Another major issue of corporate governance is that of determining the levels of the
compensation of senior management teams, and the means by which they are made.
11
Normally managers receive their compensation in four ways in developed countries:
salary, bonuses, perquisites and stock-based incentives. Tirole (2006) finds that the
sensitivity of payment to performance has increased significantly since the early 1980s,
and that stock options are becoming the most prevalent component of CEO compensation
in the U.S. The evidence from other developed economies on this issue generally
supports the U.S. evidence (Bryan et al., 2002).
Before the economic reforms began in the late 1970s, SOEs managers were paid based on
a highly structured payment scale system. The state tightly controlled the major activities
of SOEs, and all profits made by corporations were absorbed into the state budget and the
state reallocated them wherever they saw fit (Shen, 1993). Managers of SOEs acted as
government representatives and were paid based on their rank within the payment scale
system. In the other words, there was no incentive system to motivate managers to
maximise the financial performance of the firm. However, the payment system has
undergone dramatically changes since the late 1970s.
Management compensation in Chinese listed firms is now determined by the board of
directors. In the early 1990s, more incentive motivated reward systems were introduced
to SOEs. The most popular system was that the CEO’s compensation was made up of a
cash salary and a performance bonus (Firth et al., 2006). However, the bonus payment
system was not sufficiently flexible in practice. One of the major reasons was that the
method of bonus payment was not clearly defined, and the formulae used in determining
bonuses were not disclosed. Recently, listed Chinese firms have been encouraged to
adopt a more practical approach to solve this problem, which is more performance
related. It is worth noting that very few Chinese firms have executive stock option
schemes.
There is a developing body of work regarding performance based approaches. Kato and
Long (2006) find a significant relationship between the top executives’ compensation and
shareholders’ value in China. Meanwhile, the sales growth rate also has significant
relationship to executive compensation. Rui et al. (2002) find that CEO compensation is
12
significantly related to the return on assets, more so than for stock returns. In addition,
firms with foreign shareholders tend to pay more to CEOs than firms controlled by the
state. The explanation might be that foreign shareholders want to have the best available
managers in the market and so the remuneration is higher. However, Liu and Otsuka
(2004) argue that the new reward system has not brought the expected improvements in
productivity. Mengistae and Xu (2004) conclude that little evidence of performance and
compensation relationship has been found in their study. In addition, Firth et al. (2006)
find that on average the sensitivity of pay to performance is low, and this raises questions
about the effectiveness of incentive systems in China. These mixed results provide
inconclusive evidence of the role of compensation in China.
3.2 External Governance
3.2.1 External Market
The literature on the market for corporate control indicates that external markets are
important for facilitating mergers and takeovers of listed companies. In this context, well-
functioning regulations and laws protect the benefits of investors, particularly small
investors. Under this situation, it can be argued that high product market competition is
the most powerful force toward economic efficiency. In the long-term, product market
competition can force companies to minimize costs, upgrade technology and form
suitable corporate structures to fit the needs of market (Shleifer and Vishny, 1997). In a
market which facilitates the market for corporate control, the share ownership is widely
dispersed. Therefore, the shareholder influence on management is weak. Unsatisfactory
performance is often disciplined by shareholders selling and by subsequent takeovers.
However, takeover activity and an active external market are not always a component of
the governance mechanisms around the world. China is a typical example. As mentioned
before, free market style mergers and acquisitions are not allowed in China. In April
2005, the Chinese authorities announced the gradual floating of non-tradable state owned
shares for all domestically listed companies. All listed companies are required to propose
a reform plan to transfer the status of non-tradable shares and to develop a compensation
package for existing tradable shareholders comprising flexible combinations of cash,
13
warrants and bonus shares. In addition, the authorities announced plans to allow foreign
firms to acquire substantial holdings of tradable shares through the market, up to an
initial limit of 10% of the target’s stock. The central purpose of this reform is to convert
non-tradable shares to tradable shares at a price acceptable to minority investors.
Therefore, it is understandable that these sweeping ownership reforms will affect the
performance of Chinese listed companies and through them the Chinese economy. The
reforms are also having a major impact on the investing community and financial system
in China. As a result, we are expecting a more active market for corporate control to
develop with a significant impact on corporate governance practice.
3.2.2 Legal system
La Porta et al. (1998) argue that the legal system is a fundamentally important corporate
governance issue. Early corporate governance studies normally focus on board structure,
executive compensation, ownership structure or external control mechanisms. Recently,
researchers have paid more attention to the importance of legal system (Denis and
McConnell, 2003). In particular, they contend that strong legal protection for investor
interests has made diffuse ownership feasible under the common-law system. They also
argue that ownership is heavily concentrated in developing economies. In addition, La
Porta et al. (1998) find that the concentration of ownership in the largest public
companies is negatively related to investor protections, implying that small shareholders
are unlikely to play a major role in countries that fail to protect their rights. La Porta et al.
(2002b) find the evidence of higher valuation of firms in the countries with better
protection of minority shareholders. The work of La Porta et al. (1998) set in motion of
train of empirical studies that continues to this day.
Allen et al. (2005) examine China’s legal system based on the definitions of the measures
employed in La Porta et al. (1998). They find that apparently China falls in between the
English–origin countries and French-origin countries, implying China has the middle
level of investors’ protection. However, the poor record of law enforcement and severe
corruption problem put China at the bottom of the list of countries analysed, regardless of
its legal origins. Allen et al. (2005) state that China is the one of the worst countries in
14
terms of political freedom and property rights protection, consistent with the findings of
La Porta et al.’ (2004). In addition, the Chinese government still has the power to
intervene in the practice of law enforcement. In the other words, China still does not have
an independent and effective judicial system and sufficient number of qualified legal
professionals (Allen et al., 2005). Yet, China is still enjoying one of the highest economic
growth rates in the world; therefore, one could conclude that the legal system is not
necessarily one of the fundamental factors restricting economic development. In short,
Allen et al. (2005) conclude that China’s legal system is not ahead of any of the other
major emerging economies despite its remarkable economic achievements. This implies
that at this stage, without strict enforcement, corporate governance rules and regulations
lack any creditable role in the domestic market. It is the voluntary adoption of best
practice that has the potential to make a difference (Li and Naughton, 2007).
3.2.3 Financial system
The Chinese financial system has played an important role in supporting the nation’s
economy growth, and it has undergone a significant change in the last two decades. This
section provides a descriptive study of the Chinese financial system, and issues
associated with the system.
3.2.3.1 The Chinese Banking Sector
Between 1950 and 1978, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) was the only financial
institution in China, and responsible for all government credit loans, income and
expenses. After 1978, there has been substantial progress in the Chinese banking sector,
such as monetary policy independence, banking autonomy and service diversification.
Four state-owned banks were established and took over the commercial banking business
from PBOC. Currently the Chinese banking sector is dominated by the “big four”: the
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), the Agricultural Bank of China
(ABC), the Bank of China (BOC) and the People’s Construction Bank of China (PCBC).
The four state owned commercial banks collectively account for over fifty percent of the
15
total asset and liabilities (CBRC, 2007
2
), and together with regional state owned banks
dominate the banking sector. The PBOC and China Banking Regulatory Commission
(CBRC) are two current regulatory bodies which are responsible for financial
supervision, and policy issuing.
The banking system plays an important role in corporate governance in China. It is far
from being a model similar to Japan or Germany where there banking sector is more
directly involved in corporate governance and monitoring. In China, the banking sector
has been closely involved with the corporate sector through relatively freely available
lending, particularly to SOEs or listed firms with strong state connections. This
relationship fosters weak corporate governance where banks are less inclined to monitor
as is evident in the non-performing loan data. The absence of a viable corporate bond
market reinforces the lack of financial market discipline on the corporate sector.
To date, the government still tightly controls the banking system in China. La Porta et al.
(2002a) find that 99.45% of the top 10 largest commercial banks in China still are owned
by the state and this ownership level is one the highest in the world. Generally speaking,
government ownership of banks is high in countries with low level of per capita income,
underdeveloped financial systems and inefficient government (Naughton and Hovey,
1999). Allen et al. (2007) also concludes that China’s financial system is dominated by a
large, inefficient banking sector. The majority of loans are still allocated to the inefficient
SOE sector, while the dynamic private sector relies more on borrowing from other
sources (Allen et al., 2007). Recently IPOs by the banks have diluted this control and
liberalization of foreign direct investment in regional banks is changing the Chinese
banking landscape.
The most important problem of the Chinese banking sector remains the nonperforming
loans (NPL hereafter) within the big four banks (Allen et al., 2005), and reducing NPL to
sustainable levels is one of the most important tasks for China’s banking system in the
2
Source: China Banking Regulatory Commission Website, http://www.cbrc.gov.cn
16
short term. According to CBRC, major banks in China carried NPLs of RMB 1.2 trillion
on their balance sheets as of the 31 December 2006. Table 1 provides the overall
information of China’s banking sector and reported distribution of NPLs across different
types of financial institutions. As observed, the state owned commercial banks account
for a substantial portion of the NPLs. As bad as the figures in Table 1 appear, they may
be still significantly underestimated. Allen et al. (2007) argue that lack of clear
classification of NPLs is a notable explanation. In addition, the official numbers of NPLs
exclude the bad loans which have been transferred to the four state owned asset
management companies (AMCs), discussed below.
Table 1: Financial Institution in China and NPLs, December 31, 2007
% of Total Assets
& Liabilities
NPLs
(RMB Billion)
NPLs of
Total Loans
State Owned Commercial Banks 53.20% 1114.95 8.05%
Joint Stock Banks 13.80% 86.04 2.15%
City Commercial Banks 6.40% 51.15 3.04%
Other Financial Institutions 26.60% 16.28 4.53%
Source: China Banking Regulatory Commission Website, http://www.cbrc.gov.cn
Generally speaking, China’s huge NPLs burden is largely a result of poor lending
decision to SOEs, and the lack of a commercial credit culture in major financial
institutions. SOEs obtained the majority of this external funding from the banks, the big
four in particular. However, the overall financial performance of SOEs is still not
satisfactory. These banks often keep lending to underperforming SOEs even though they
have little ability to repay, under perception that the ultimate losses will be covered by
the government (Naughton and Hovey, 1999). The second major cause is the lack of a
commercial credit culture in the Chinese banking sector. Senior managers of all major
banks are typically appointed by the central government, so it is hard to believe that
major banks have fully independent business activities. Major lending activities for
infrastructure projects and social welfare subsidies sometimes are under the mandate of
the government; therefore profitability is not the most important issue in the associated
17
decision making. As a result, lending processes and risk management skills are far from
meeting international standards. Therefore, Allen et al. (2005) conclude that China’s
financial system is dominated by a large but inefficient banking sector.
To address NPLs problem, the Chinese government set up four AMCs in 1999 to manage
and dispose of NPLs which were bought from the big four state-owned commercial
banks. The AMCs have adopted a variety of approaches to solve the huge NPLs problem
since 1999. The primary approaches adopted include debt for equity swaps, liquidation
methods and securitizations. For the debt for equity swaps, AMCs are entitled to
purchase NPLs from SOEs at the agreed price, and further monitor the business activities
of SOEs. Liquidation methods include sale or leases of real property, direct sales of
packaged or individual NPLs to investors, and bankruptcy settlement. Securitization is a
process of transferring non-marketable assets to a special purpose vehicle and issuing
securities to investors with a “guaranteed” stream of cash flows generated by the assets.
Legal support of securitization has been provided by the introduction of Trust Law in
2001. Recent reports (PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2007) indicate that as of the end of 2006,
the AMCs have resolved RMB 1.21 Trillion of the 1999 transfer loans. The total sales to
foreign investors from 2001-2006 is more than RMB 212 billion, roughly USD 26.4
billion. In an effort to minimize loss and maximize recovery, the AMCs will also provide
debtors with such services like management consulting, off-market mergers, spin-offs,
restructuring, and IPO recommendations. Moreover, the Chinese central government has
injected foreign currency reserves into these banks to improve the balance sheets.
However, all these methods of NPL reductions cannot prevent new NPLs from
originating in the banking system. If the NPLs keep accumulating, it might lead to a
financial crisis. This could spill over into other sectors and trigger an economic recession.
Therefore, more effective approaches might be to relinquish state majority control of
state-owned banks, and increase the levels of competition and efficiency. In terms of
corporate governance, the banking sector performance does little to improve the system.
The lax lending by banks props up weak governance and offers little by way of market
monitoring of the corporate sector.
18
3.2.3.2 The Chinese Equity Market
In 1989, the State Council decided to establish two primary national stock exchanges
markets. With the opening of the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges in 1990 and
1991 respectively, listed companies were able to raise funds from domestic and foreign
investors. The primary initial purpose of opening the two stock exchanges was to raise
funds for restructuring and fostering a more effective management system in SOEs
selected for listings. Though the market was immature, the number of listed companies,
trading volume and the total market capitalization grew quickly during the 1990s to
become one of the largest in the region. According to the latest figures issued by the two
stock exchanges as at April 2008, there are 690 companies listed on Shenzhen stock
exchange with a total of 732 stocks issued, with having a total market value of more than
RMB 4157.5 billion Yuan. As to the Shanghai stock exchange, in April 2008, 863
companies had stocks issued on it, for a total of 1,140 stocks issued with a total market
value of more than RMB 17,198.8 billion Yuan. The emergence of the stock market
characterizes a major change in the ideological framework of reforms in China, which
represents an important constituent part of the process of ownership changes.
The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) and China Securities
Regulatory Commission (CSRC) are the two official regulatory bodies responsible for
monitoring stock exchange activities and security policy formulation. Until recently the
NDRC and CSRC together determined how many shares in total should be issued each
year in accordance with development objectives. As we can see, this process of selecting
listing companies in China differed considerably from a mature market economy, where
the decision to list an enterprise is normally governed by the listing rules of the stock
exchange, and firms make listing decisions in collaboration with investments banking
advisors.
China’s listed firms were burdened with poor corporate governance because of state
control via majority ownership of shares. Some analysts argued that share prices had
fallen over the several years because individual investors had no effective control over
how firms were managed. As previously mentioned, the Chinese authorities announced
19
on 29 April 2005, that there would be a gradual market float of non-tradable state-owned
shares for all domestically listed companies. The reforms undertaken involve a dramatic
ownership structure change, by way of an increase in the supply of tradable company
shares in the share market as it is rapidly opening to foreign strategic foreign investment
by single share holding up to 10%. At this moment, the reform is still far from the final
stage, so this might be a future research direction of Chinese corporate governance
system. The gradual floating of all issued shares and the opening to foreign investors
creates the potential for an active market for corporate control in China.
4. Corporate Governance Codes in China
In order to establish a complete modern enterprise system and standardize the operating
process of listed companies and security companies, the CSRC has issued few regulations
on corporate governance. In January 2001, the CSRC issued a “Code for Corporate
Governance of Listed Companies” in China (hereinafter the LC Code). The Code is
applicable to all listed companies within the boundary of the People’s Republic of China,
and aims at the protection of investor’s interests and rights, the basic behaviour rules and
moral standards for directors, supervisors, managers and other senior management
members of listed companies. In January 2004, the CSRC issued a “Provisional Code of
Corporate Governance for Security Companies” in China (hereinafter the SC Code). The
Security Code is applicable to all listed companies with the boundary of the People’s
Republic of China, and pays more attention to the operations of securities companies,
ensuring the legitimate interests of shareholders, clients and other interested parties of the
securities companies are well protected. These two Codes are the major measuring
standard of evaluating whether a listed/security company has a good corporate
governance structure. If major problems exist with the corporate governance structure of
a listed/security company, the securities supervision and regulation authorities may
instruct the company to make corrections in accordance with Codes.
The LC Code contains seven main chapters dealing with shareholder and shareholders’
meetings; the listed company and its controlling shareholders; directors and the board of
directors; the supervisors and the supervisory board; performance assessments and
20
incentive and disciplinary systems; stakeholders; and information disclosure and
transparency. The SC Code has a similar structure, and also addresses the issues related
to management personnel and the basic principle of relationships between securities
companies and clients. The brief summaries of the LC and SC Codes are as follows:
(1) Shareholder and shareholders’ meeting
A listed company should ensure fair treatment toward all shareholders, and all
shareholders should enjoy the legal rights stipulated by laws, administrative regulations
and the company’s articles of association. They should have redress through legal action
if their rights are violated. The listed company should establish efficient channels of
communication with its shareholders and shareholders should be informed of major
matters that affect the company. Directors, supervisors and managers of companies
should bear the liability of compensation if they breach laws and regulations. In related
party transactions, these transitions should, in principle, be at market value.
Additional requirements related to security companies include requirements that
shareholders and actual controllers of a security company have the qualifications required
by the laws, administrative rules and CSRC regulations. Security companies and their
major shareholders are required not to provide financing or guarantees to related parties
or other shareholders directly or indirectly. Moreover, security companies are required to
notify the CSRC if the company has a major change in the management team or
ownership or having a heavy financial loss. There is also a legal requirement if a
securities company suspects major illegal activities.
(2) Controlling shareholders
The controlling shareholders must comply with laws and regulations while exercising
their rights as investors, and should be prevented from harming the listed company’s or
other shareholder’s legal interests. Meanwhile the controlling shareholders have the right
to nominate candidates for directorships and supervisory committee positions based on
their professional skills, knowledge and experience. The decision-making rights belong to
the general shareholders’ meeting or to the board of directors. Listed companies should
21
operate independently of their controlling shareholders in such aspects as personnel,
assets and financial affairs. The board of directors, the supervisory committee and other
internal offices of listed companies should operate in an independent manner.
(3) Directors and board of directors
The election of directors should be organized in a transparent, independent, open, and fair
procedure. The detailed information about the candidates for directorship should be
disclosed prior to the shareholders’ meeting. The election for directors should fully
reflect the opinions of minority shareholders. The elected directors should “faithfully,
honestly, and diligently” perform their duties for the best interests of the company and all
shareholders, and they should contribute adequate time and energy to their duties. For the
independent directors of a listed company, they should be independent from the listed
company and its major shareholders and fulfil their duties faithfully and diligently. The
board of directors should be made accountable to shareholders, should treat all
shareholders equally, and should ensure that listed company complies with the relevant
laws and regulations. The LC Code specified that by 30 June 2003, at least one-third of
the board should be independent directors.
The SC Code, on the other hand, requires that inside directors of a securities company
should not exceed half of the total directors, and appointing directors from outside
professionals is encouraged. Independent directors of a security company should have the
basic knowledge of securities markets and be familiar with relevant laws and regulations.
They should be honest and creditable, and have more than 5 years’ working experience in
related fields. The term of office of independent directors should be the same as that of
other directors, but should not be renewed twice consecutively.
(4) Supervisors and supervisory board
The supervisory board of a listed or securities company should supervise the corporate
finance, monitor directors’ performance, and protect the company’s and shareholders’
legal rights and interests. Supervisors should have professional knowledge or relevant
work experience in such areas as law and accounting. The structure and the members of
22
the supervisory board should be able to independently and efficiently fulfil their duties.
The supervisory board’s meeting should be minuted. The supervisory board may require
the directors, management personnel or other related persons to attend the supervisory
board meeting and answer the questions that the board is concerned about. Securities
companies are encouraged to appoint outside professionals as their supervisors.
(5) Performance assessments and incentive and disciplinary systems
The performance of directors, supervisors, and management of a listed or security
company should be assessed through a fair and transparent procedure, and evaluation
processes should be conducted through a combination of self-review and peer review,
and approved by the board of directors. The evaluation results and compensation of
directors and supervisors should be reported to the shareholders’ meeting. The
appointment and removal of senior staffs should comply with legal procedure in a fair,
independent and transparent manner, and should be publicly announced. The
compensation for management personnel should be related to the company’s performance
and the individual’s work performance.
(6) Stakeholders and clients relationship
A listed or security company should respect the legal rights of the various stakeholder
groups and provide the protection to the interest related parties, such as creditors,
employees, consumers, suppliers, and communities. Employees in particular are
encouraged to provide relevant feedback to improve the company’s overall performance.
Moreover, securities companies should observe the laws and regulations when providing
products or services to clients, should give full disclosure of the contents and risks of the
products or services, and should not infringe the client’s property rights, options, right to
fair deals, right to be informed and other legitimate rights and interests. In addition,
securities companies should not misappropriate the clients’ settlement funds for
transactions, properties entrusted by the clients for management and the securities
deposited by the clients in the company. Securities companies are encouraged to release
23
their audited annual financial report to the public and make sure the contents of such
disclosure are true and accurate.
(7) Information and disclosure and transparency
A listed company should disclose all information that may impact on the decisions of
shareholders and stakeholders. The importance of the provision of truthful, complete and
timely information is emphasized. The disclosed information should be accessed by the
shareholders and stakeholders in an economical, convenient and speedy manner. The
corporate governance information of the company should be available to the public, plus
the explanation if there is a gap between the company’s corporate governance and the
Code. Furthermore, detailed information of major shareholders and changes of major
shareholders should be available to the public accurately and in a timely manner.
To further strengthen the corporate governance activities in the Chinese market, the
CSRC has issued a series of regulations called “Standards Concerning the Contents and
Formats of Information Disclosure” in shares, bonds, and other types of securities issued
since August 2003. These regulations aim to standardize the information disclosure
activities for public offering of securities by the listed and securities companies and
protect the legal rights and interests of investors.
5. Issues in the Current Corporate Governance Model in China
On the surface, these codes provide similar guidelines to those found in codes issued in
many other parts of the world. This implies that Chinese listed firms and securities
companies have a corporate governance system which is similar to the characteristics of a
corporation in a mature market economy. However, Clarke (2003) argues that the
fundamental dilemma of SOE reform stems from the state policy of maintaining a full or
controlling ownership interest in enterprises in several sectors. On the one hand, the state
wants the SOEs to be efficient, while wealth maximization is not the sole objective of
SOEs, otherwise, there would be no rationale for maintaining state ownership. Claessens
and Fan (2002) also argue that the issue of the ownership of a firm’s value is more
complicated when the state is the controlling owner. First, the state is not the ultimate
24
owner, but the agent of the ultimate owners – the citizens. However, the motivation of
value maximization is not an incentive for the state because of other political priorities, as
well as the corruption that is evident in China (Che and Qian, 1998; Lin et al., 1997;
Peng, 2001). Second, there are many different types of governmental agencies that
control the equity stake of companies. For example, ownership controlled by the central
government may have different incentives from ownership controlled by local or regional
governments, or state institution ownership. Third, it is hard to distinguish the
relationship between state ownership and firm performance, especially in socialist
countries, such as China, because other institutional structures must also be taken into
account. Faccio (2006) finds that companies with stronger links to the government have
higher leverage, lower taxation, and higher market shares, but they underperform non-
connected companies on accounting measures. Furthermore, she points out that this
phenomenon is more popular in countries with higher levels of corruption, with barriers
to foreign investment, and less transparent systems.
Several key problems in the Chinese corporate governance system are well documented
(Hovey et al. 2003; Lin, 2004; Allen et al., 2005; Clarke, 2006). The first is the highly
concentrated ownership structure. Companies with a widely dispersed ownership
structure where no individual owns a controlling block of shares are virtually-non-
existent (Clarke, 2006). Albeit, in China in instances where private blockholders own
controlling blocks of shares, the findings of Hess et al. (2008) indicate that expropriation
of minority investors does exist. Market liquidity is severely impeded because the state
and legal person shares cannot be traded on the stock market because of trading
restrictions, resulting in only around 35% of total shares being freely tradable. This has
significantly reduced market liquidity and has become a major obstacle to market
efficiency. In addition, those large investors may only act in their own interests at the
expense of individual investors, suggesting individual shareholders’ interests are not well
protected, irrespective of whether blockholders are state or private sector investors.
The second key problem is insider trading, self dealings, collusion and market
manipulation, although the Chinese government has policies against these activities
25
(Tam, 2002). The major cause of these issues is the absence of effective monitoring of
companies by their directors and supervisory boards and of the market by regulatory
authorities. In addition, at no stage in the chain of monitors are there appropriate
incentives because the ultimate owner of SOEs and most listed firms is the state (Clarke,
2003). Moreover, to attract outside investors, companies were found to provide falsified
financial information to the public in order to hide their efficiencies and mismanagement,
and those companies definitely severely damaged the reputation of the Chinese stock
market (China Economics Time, 2001).
The third major problem is the dysfunction of the board of directors, board of supervisors
and other relevant committees (Tam, 2002; Schipani and Liu, 2002). By law, large
shareholders have more power on directors’ appointments due to the one share one vote
principle, and it is hard to see that directors represent minority shareholders’ interests
even though the LC Code requires recognition of minority interests in appointment
(Clarke, 2006). One of the major reasons is that politicians and state-controlling owners
sit on most boards and committees because of the highly concentrated ownership
structure. As a result, these boards and committees lack independency. Chen et al. (2002)
find that around 80 percent of directors on Chinese boards are closely connected to the
government or governmental agencies, and only a few are professionals (lawyer,
accountants or finance experts). The likelihood of finding a director being concerned with
or representing minority shareholders is very small. Moreover, Clarke (2006) claims that
supervisory boards lack the power to control directors and the management team, and
plays no important role in corporate governance in China.
The final key problem is the legal system (Tam, 2002; SSE, 2003). La Porta et al. (2003) find
that enforcement of laws is more effective than just having strong regulations, and is
particularly relevant to China. Allen et al. (2005) argue that the inefficiencies in the Chinese
market can be attributed to poor and ineffective regulation and enforcement. Lin (2004)
identifies four areas of weakness in the Chinese external governance structure: lack of
information transparency and professional managers; weak legal enforcement; the absence of
or weak monitoring by banks, professional organizations, and the media; and the
26
insignificant roles played by individual shareholders and small institutional shareholders. As
a result, the Chinese stock market is characterized by: a short history; an extremely high (but
volatile) growth rate; high government intervention; low transparency and weak investor
protection.
To solve these problems, a number of suggestions have been proposed by researchers
(Lin, 2004; Clarke, 2006; Allen et. al, 2007). Generally speaking, a well discussed
suggestion is to make the non-tradable shares tradable. The limitations of large block of
non-tradable shares have been well documented, and the Chinese authorities have
previously attempted to resolve this problem in 1999 and 2001. However, these two
attempts did not receive a positive market reaction as the proposals were not attractive to
tradable shareholders. In 2005, the Chinese authorities made the third attempt to
introduce a programme of gradual floatation of non-tradable shares for all domestically
listed companies. More than 1500 listed companies are involved and each company was
required to provide a compensation package for existing tradable shareholders
comprising flexible combinations of cash, warrants and bonus shares and approved by the
general shareholders’ meeting. While the bulk of state and legal person shares are now
technically tradable, there are restrictions in place on the quantity that can be traded for a
several more years. This ongoing reform will have an extensive impact on the investment
community and financial system in China in the long run.
Second, the functions of board of directors and supervisors have to be clearly defined,
strengthened and made more independent. To improve the quality of the board’s
operations, more professional and/or independent directors and supervisors are required
to sit on boards and minority shareholders’ interests should be explicitly considered
during the process of director appointment. There is also a need to strengthen and enforce
requirements to operate specialised committees of board of directors, such as corporate
strategy committee, nomination committee, remuneration committee, and auditing
committee. The LC Code is weak in this respect. The legal and regulatory system must
be given greater powers to enforce. All these committees should be composed entirely of
independent directors. Moreover, a more clearly defined performance related
27
compensation mechanism should be implemented for directors and supervisors.
Third, as observed above, China needs to have well functioning investor protection laws
and more efficient legal enforcement systems. The enforcement of laws and regulations
must be effective enough to deter irregularities in China. More specified explanations of
laws and regulations should be implemented to minimise the legal “grey’ area. From the
corporate governance aspect, the major concern is to monitor the expropriation of the
investors by senior managers. Therefore, managers also should be properly motivated
instead of expropriating investors by entrenching themselves by staying in their position
even though they are not qualified for the job or are no longer effective, or any other
means.
Fourth, there is a need to provide better protection for the interests of individual investors
and enforce their rights. Several approaches need to be introduced: (1) enhancing
shareholders’ voting mechanisms; (2) entitling shareholders to question the company’s
business operations; (3) lowering the minimum required number of shares for the
shareholders to raise proposals; (4) safeguarding the interests of minority shareholders;
and (5) increasing the legal obligation of controlling shareholders (Lin, 2004).
The Chinese government appears to have realized the existing flaws in the current
corporate governance system, and has implemented several policies to improve the
market efficiency and the overall quality of public companies in China. Although there
are many laws and regulations governing the corporate behaviour of companies, further
attention should be paid to the political/legal will, efficiency and transparency of legal
enforcement. Evolution in the corporate governance in China provides a framework for
corporate governance experiments. We argue that China has undergone considerable
corporate governance evolution but has yet to establish a unifying system that balances
social-economic forces with the economy. China has a unique environment and the
evolution of corporate management, supervision and governance is likely to continue to
develop into a uniquely Chinese system. China has the opportunity to capture best
international practice while controlling the excesses of the existing internal weaknesses.
28
6. Concluding Remarks
This chapter has reviewed the complex process of transition that China has experienced
in enterprise reforms and the emergence of a system of corporate governance. Legal,
institutional and regulatory reforms have accompanied this transition. The review has
focused on the problems and challenges in implementing a corporate governance system
in China. A central issue is the still powerful influence of the state in the corporate sector
of the economy. We document the problems that remain and make suggestions for
ongoing change. However, in conclusion we recognise that dramatic change in terms of
enforcement and compliance will not happen overnight. Culture and systemic barriers
remain powerful and the operation of an efficient and ethical corporate governance
system that protects the interests of all parties is still an ambitious goal. However, we
have observed the lack of what might be regarded as a best practice corporate governance
system has not to date been an impediment to economic growth. The remarkable
economic success of China in recent history has been achieved with a unique system of
economic management and corporate regulation and governance.
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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA | SEPTEMBER 2017
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA
Scores for Chinese companies cluster around the median relative to global peers, VIEs and SOEs have distinct governance risks
September 2017
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE SCORE
RE DISTRIBUTION
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
MSCI China Index MSCI Emerging Markets Index
MSCI ACWI Index
Laggards Leaders
This report is based on the 149 constituents of the MSCI China Index as at 11 September 2017.
Some references are made to other Chinese companies in coverage.
Top 5 Scores Bottom 5 Scores
China Shenhua Energy Co Ltd 7.2/10 Alibaba Group Holdings Limited 0.0/10
China Merchants Bank Co Ltd 7.2/10
CTRIP.COM International Ltd. 1.6/10
China Telecom Corporation Ltd 7.2/10 JD.COM Inc. 2.1/10
Sun Art Retail Group Ltd 7.1/10 Netease, Inc. 2.7/10
Lenovo Group Ltd 7.1/10 Huaneng Renewables 2.8/10
CHINA IN CONTEXT
Recognition of the importance of corporate governance principles has a long history in China. China’s first corporate governance
code was introduced by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) in 2001, ahead of many APAC peers, and updated
further in 2011. In August 2016 a review of this code was announced by the Chairman of the CSRC, and other legislative reforms
are also under review. As more and more global investors consider investing in Chinese equities, the importance of these efforts
to adopt and adhere to global standards of good corporate governance can only continue to grow. Our report examines the
many opportunities – and risks – presented by current corporate governance practices in China, based on the expectations of
these potential investors.
The expectations of global investors regarding the governance of publicly traded companies have been guided by the adoption of
corporate governance codes and standards across virtually all global markets, beginning with publication in the UK in 1992 of
“Financial Aspects of Corporate Governance”, more widely known as the “Cadbury Report”. According to Cadbury, “The
shareholders’ role in governance is to appoint the directors and the auditors and to satisfy themselves that an appropriate
governance structure is in place,” and “The responsibilities of the board include setting the company’s strategic aims, providing
the leadership to put them into effect, supervising the management of the business and reporting to shareholders on their
stewardship. The board’s actions are subject to laws, regulations and the shareholders in general meeting.” These core principles
have been used to inform the definition of good corporate governance ever since.
Contents
Variable Interest Entities
Founders Favored
2
2
State Involvement 4
Misalignment of Interests 5
Ownership Snapshot 6
https://www.google.com.hk/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=imgres&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwjq85bPn4zTAhXGVbwKHTAQAYwQjRwIBw&url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_China&psig=AFQjCNE0iIbnvq0KRrz3R7_rO_hbFyvdzA&ust=1491444970978467
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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA | SEPTEMBER 2017
KEY FINDINGS
China adopted its first corporate governance code in 2001, ahead of
many APAC peers, and with updates in 2011 and 2016. As China’s market
becomes more accessible to global investors, corporate governance
practices will likely face increased comparison to global standards. This
report examines the opportunities and risks to minority shareholders
presented by current corporate governance practices in China.
In aggregate, constituents of the MSCI China Index cluster more around
the median score on corporate governance relative to constituents of the
MSCI ACWI Index. Key areas of concern include pay and board issues (no
independent chair, no independent board majority), controlling
shareholder and related party transaction conflicts, and limited
shareholder protection rights. Regulatory oversight differences between
A-share (Mainland China) and H-share (Hong Kong) listings, in some cases
for the same company, contribute additional layers of risk and
complexity.
Companies employing variable interest entity (VIE) structures are large
(16 companies with constituent weights on the MSCI China Index of 12%
as of 1 August 2017) and show generally strong returns. But VIE
governance structures are often tilted to favor the founder and
ownership risk is increased due to legal uncertainties.
In contrast to private enterprises, over the past five years shareholder
returns at Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have underperformed
the MSCI China Index. The Chinese State has undertaken a multi-pronged
reform program aimed at improving returns, but the possibility of
misalignment between the strategic interests of the state and those of
minority shareholders remains a key governance risk.
MARKET CHARACTERISTIC |VARIABLE
INTEREST ENTITIES
Despite being some of the largest, most discussed companies in China, four of
the bottom five governance assessments for constituents of the MSCI China
Index utilize a variable interest entity (‘VIE’) structure.
Under current Chinese legislation, foreign investors are not permitted to
invest directly in Chinese companies that operate in key industries, e.g.,
internet, education and telecommunications.
RISK – GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE FAVORS FOUNDERS
Many VIEs retain founder involvement. Due to the nature of the
contractual relationships and the associated risks, the reputation and
equity commitment held by the founder is often key to an IPOs success.
Founders typically use three primary tools to maintain a tight grip on
the control of the listed SPV – a dual share class structure granting them
superior voting power; incorporation in a management-friendly
jurisdiction; and dominating the board, often via the key role of
Chairman while retaining executive powers.
MSCI.COM | PAGE 3 OF 8 © 2017 MSCI Inc. All rights reserved. Please refer to the disclaimer at the end of this document.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA | SEPTEMBER 2017
CAPITAL AND OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE
Dual Share Classes with Unequal Voting Rights
Among the 12 VIEs that are founder firms, eight utilize dual class share
structures with the share class held by the founders carrying superior voting
rights. This arrangement has allowed the founders to reduce their capital
investment while maintaining control of the company. With this dual class
share structure not permitted in Hong Kong,
1
these eight companies are listed
on U.S. stock exchanges as a foreign private issuer.
Figure 1 | Disparity between Founder Ownership and Voting Rights at VIEs
Source: MSCI ESG Research. Data as at 27 July 2017
1
This approach is not viable on Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing (HKEX) as a result of the opposition
to dual class shares by the Securities and Futures Commission in October 2015 which aborted an
earlier consultation to allow dual class shares to be listed on HKEX. In June 2017, HKEX started a
consultation with a view to allowing dual class shares on a new board
http://www.hkex.com.hk/eng/newsconsul/hkexnews/2017/170616news.htm.
DEPRIVATION OF SHAREHOLDER PROTECTION RIGHTS
The VIEs are typically incorporated in the Cayman Islands with some utilizing
the Cayman Islands ‘Exempt Companies’ provisions. Two provisions are of
particular concern – the absence of legal requirement to hold AGMs and
setting the requisition threshold for an EGM at an excessively high level. Hong
Kong Listing rules specifically require the holding of AGMs.
Last AGM …
Two VIEs have taken advantage of the flexibility under the ‘Exempt
Companies’ regime to avoid the holding of AGMs.
Last AGM >>
Baidu
2008
JD.com
None since 2014 IPO
In their respective Articles of Association, Alibaba, Baidu and JD.com have
taken advantage of the Cayman Islands ‘Exempt Company’ provisions to
impose unusually high thresholds to request an EGM.
EGM Threshold versus Aggregate Voting Rights of Minority Shareholders
Baidu JD.com Alibaba
EGM Threshold >> 50% 33.3% 33.3%
Aggregate Voting Rights of
Minority Shareholders > 30.8% 20.0% 45.2%*
*Those shares not held by the executive officers (10.6%), Softbank (29.2%) or Yahoo (15.0%).
Given the size of the respective controlling interests at Baidu and JD.com, the
minorities are left unable to take remedial action through convening an EGM.
At Alibaba, some 75% of minority shareholders would need to collaborate to
request an EGM, a near impossible task.
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
58.COM
Inc
Alibaba VIPSHOP
Holdings
JD.COM Baidu,Inc. YY Inc. MOMO
INC
TAL
Education
% of Shares Held % of Total Voting Rights Held
http://www.hkex.com.hk/eng/newsconsul/hkexnews/2017/170616news.htm
MSCI.COM | PAGE 4 OF 8 © 2017 MSCI Inc. All rights reserved. Please refer to the disclaimer at the end of this document.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA | SEPTEMBER 2017
MARKET CHARACTERISTIC | STATE
OWNERSHIP
In contrast to VIEs, which dominate the MSCI China Index in terms of
capitalization but represent a small number of companies, about 90
companies in our dataset (59.7%) are State-owned.
ORGANISATION OF STATE OWNED ENTERPRISES
In China, some 102 central state-owned enterprises (SOEs) are supervised by
the State-owned Assets Supervision & Administration Commission (SASAC).
SASAC appoints and provides training to the directors of these central SOEs. It
decides on their remuneration and sets profit targets for these SOEs. There
are also local SOEs supervised by local bureaus of SASAC in the various
different provinces/municipalities.
HOW MUCH EQUITY IS HELD BY THE STATE?
The state typically holds a majority stake (MSCI ESG Research and local
regulations both utilize 30%+ of the voting rights as the threshold for a
majority stake).
Figure 2 | Percentage of State Holdings at MSCI China Index SOEs
Source: MSCI ESG Research. Data as at 27 July 2017
Figure 3| Relationship between Chinese Government, SASAC , SOEs, Huijin and MOF
Source: MSCI ESG Research
Figure 4 | Common Control in Banking Sector
Source: Company Annual Reports.
14.6%
19.1%
33.7%
30.3%
2.2%
10 – 30% 31-50% 51 – 60% 61 – 74% 75+%
State Council of
the National
Peoples’ Congress
Ministries
Ministry of
Finance
Financial
Institutions
SASAC
Central SOEs
Subsidiaries or
Departments
Local
Governments
Local SASACs
Local SOEs
Subsidiaries or
Departments
China
Investment
Corporation
Central Huijin
Investment
Financial
Institutions
Ministry of Finance / Central
Huijin Investment Ltd
Agricultural Bank
of China
Industrial &
Commercial Bank
of China
Bank of China Ltd
China Construction
Bank
64.6% 57.3% 79.2% 69.3%
MSCI.COM | PAGE 5 OF 8 © 2017 MSCI Inc. All rights reserved. Please refer to the disclaimer at the end of this document.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA | SEPTEMBER 2017
RISK – MISALIGNMENT OF INTERESTS IN SOE FIRMS
Shareholder returns at Chinese SOEs underperform relative to both other
MSCI ACWI Index SOEs and other MSCI China Index constituents, given
possible misalignment of interests within SOEs.
The SOE reform program represents an effort to address this possible
misalignment in the long term. The previous 2013-14 reform initiatives
have shown limited progress to date. SASAC set three key goals for listed
SOE companies in 2017, a sign of continued focus on the SOE reform
process.
One of the SOE reform tracks is to make boards more autonomous. In general
Chinese SOE boards include government representatives and sector
expertise, but most boards do not have a majority of independent directors,
while 75% of Chairman roles are executive positions.
2013-14 SOE REFORM INITIATIVES
Since the November 2013 third plenum of the Central Committee of the CCP,
SOE reform has been on the agenda for the Chinese government. However,
instead of wholesale financial reform, the SOE reform process has been one
of incremental changes, using the various approaches below.
One of the themes of SOE reform has been to change state control from
management of company to management of capital.
Management of Capital: establishing state-owned capital investment and
operation companies, transferring the equities in SOEs from SASAC to these
companies.
Mixed ownership reform, allowing non-state capital to share ownership of
SOEs together with SASAC-controlled state-owned parents, with a view to
sharing board control with non-state interests.
Giving company boards more autonomy to make decisions, segregating party
control and management/board control under the legal framework.
Mergers in strategic sectors including railways, telecommunications, energy
(e.g., coal and power companies), shipping and steel.
Increasing dividend payouts by SOEs.
In our June 2015 report “China’s Economic Transformation: A New Era of ESG
Opportunity,” we highlighted that the new round of SOE reform would aim to
enhance corporate efficiency through mixed ownership and incentivized pay.
However, progress has been limited to date.
Increasing Dividend Payments
In 2014 MOF raised the ratio of profits to be handed over by SOEs to the
government. More than 120 SOEs administered by the central government
would pay 5 percentage points more of their profits.The plan divided the SOEs
into five categories that would be required to pay between zero and 25
percent of after-tax profits as a dividend to the government.
2
Figure 5 | Required Dividend Payments at SOEs
Required % of Post-Tax Profit
as Dividends to the State
Applicable Companies
25% China National Tobacco Corporation
20%
14 companies, including energy companies such as China
Petrochemical Corporation and telecom carriers such as
China Mobile
15%
70 companies, including railway-related companies such as
China Railway Engineering Corporation and resources
companies such as Aluminum Corporation of China
10% 30+ firms, including nuclear energy and culture companies
Source: MOF data (www.mof.gov.cn)
2
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/858820.shtml
http://www.mof.gov.cn/
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/858820.shtml
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA
MSCI.COM | PAGE 6 OF 8 © 2017 MSCI Inc. All rights reserved. Please refer to the disclaimer at the end of this document.
OWNERSHIP SNAPSHOT
Governance risks vary widely depending on the nature of the company’s ownership, the separation of ownership and management, and the design of the capital structure
and its impact on shareholders’ voting rights.
Largest Owner Classification Key Owner Types Complex Ownership Structures Control Enhancing Structures
Concentrated ownership dominates in China,
where 81.9% of MSCI China Index constituents
include a shareholder or shareholder group,
often the State itself, who controls 30% or
more of the voting rights,
Most Chinese firms are state-owned at 59.7%,
often controlled by other state companies via
intermediate holding companies. At 26.2%,
founder firms are the next most significant
group, and many of these are VIEs (variable
interest entities, see page 3).
Few MSCI China Index constituents are
party to cross shareholdings or
positioned at levels 3 or below in a
stock pyramid, although the pyramidal
nature of many of the SOEs (state
owned entities) is noted.
Companies with unequal voting rights are
generally listed on US exchanges (variable
interest entities, see page 3). In a market where
81.9% of companies are controlled, such control
enhancing structures are not really needed, and
yet they are employed anyway.
Controlling – Largest shareholder or shareholder
group holds 30% or more of the voting
rights.
Principal – Largest shareholder or shareholder
group holds between 10% and 30% of the voting
rights.
Widely Held – No shareholder or shareholder group
holds more than 10% of the voting rights.
Founder – Founder serves as Chairman or CEO
Family – Family hold 10% or more of the voting
rights and maintain at least one board seat
State – State directly or indirectly controls 10% of
the voting rights
Corporate Parent – Issuer is a subsidiary (30% or
more) of a corporate, which itself may be listed
*Owner types may overlap or separate owners may be of
different types at a company
Cross Shareholdings – Two or more
entities hold at least 0.5% of shares in each
other, or via a circular or more complex
cross-shareholding arrangement.
Pyramids – Control is exercised through a
chain of non-controlled companies, which
ultimately results in a shareholder gaining
voting power that is misaligned with their
economic interests.
Multiple Share Classes with Unequal Voting Rights (or
no voting rights for one class) or classes which carry
different rights to vote on director appointments.
Voting Rights Mechanisms include ceilings on
ownership or voting rights, voting rights limits based
on nationality, or additional voting rights accruing
depending on ownership duration.
Golden Shares – Government veto rights for
transactions or changes to governing documents.
81.9%
14.8%
3.4%
68.3%
2
4.2%
7.5%
37.3%
28.2%
34.5%
Controlling Principal Widely Held
MSCI China Index
MSCI Emerging Markets Index
MSCI ACWI Index
26.2%
16.1%
5
9.7%
53.7%
5.4%
10.5%
8.9% 10.4%
12.1%
18.6%
11.8%
15.1%
Founder Family State Corporate
Parent
MSCI China Index
MSCI Emerging Markets Index
MSCI ACWI Index
14.1%
2.0%
7.2%
3.5%
6.3%
1.7%
Cross Shareholdings Pyramid Structure
MSCI China Index
MSCI Emerging Markets Index
MSCI ACWI Index
6.0%
0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
4.2%
9.2%
0.0% 1.2%
9.7%
16.0%
2.3% 1.8%
Multiple Share
Classes w/
Unequal Voting
Rights
Voting Rights
Limits
Extra Voting
Rights –
Ownership
Duration
Golden Shares
MSCI China Index
MSCI Emerging Markets Index
MSCI ACWI Index
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA
AMERICAS
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ABOUT MSCI ESG RESEARCH PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
MSCI ESG Research products and services are provided by MSCI ESG Research LLC, and are designed to provide in-depth research, ratings and analysis of
environmental, social and governance-related business practices to companies worldwide. ESG ratings, data and analysis from MSCI ESG Research LLC are
also used in the construction of the MSCI ESG Indexes. MSCI ESG Research LLC is a Registered Investment Adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 and a subsidiary of MSCI Inc.
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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN CHINA | SEPTEMBER 2017
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MSCI ESG Research LLC is a Registered Investment Adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and a subsidiary of MSCI Inc. Except with respect to any applicable products or services from MSCI ESG
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OECD-China Policy Dialogue on Corporate Governance
Corporate Governance of Listed Companies
in China
SELF-ASSESSMENT BY THE CHINA SECURITIES REGULATORY
COMMISSIO
N
This report looks at the institutional framework of corporate governance in China through the prism of the
OECD Principles of Corporate Governance and is a product of the ongoing OECD-China Policy Dialogue on
Corporate Governance. By assessing a broad range of laws, regulations and codes, it provides a valuable
reference for understanding how much has been achieved in Chinese corporate governance and the main
ambitions of future reform efforts.
The report shows that corporate governance has improved signifi cantly since the Chinese stock market
was created in 1990, with important achievements in establishing and developing the legal and regulatory
framework. The OECD-China Self-Assessment represents a thorough review of all laws, regulations and codes
that relate to every principle recommended by the OECD Principles of Corporate Governance. It documents
the advances in the Chinese Corporate Governance framework. Building on this report, bilateral co-operation
between China and the OECD will continue to enhance the understanding of China’s corporate governance
system and how it impacts on company and investor behaviour.
Contents
Preface by Shang Fulin, Chairman, China Securities Regulatory Commission
, Deputy Secretary-General, OECD
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Stakeholders
and corporate social responsibility
ISBN 978-92-64-11908-6
26 2011 08 1 P -:HSTCQE=VV^U][:
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OECD-China Policy Dialogue
on Corporate Governance
Corporate Governance of
Listed Companies in China
SELF-ASSESSMENT BY THE CHINA SECURITIES
REGULATORY COMMISSION
Please cite this publication as:
OECD (2011), Corporate Governance of Listed Companies in China: Self-Assessment by the China Securities
Regulatory Commission, OECD Publishing.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264119208-en
This work is published on the OECD iLibrary, which gathers all OECD books, periodicals and statistical
databases. Visit www.oecd-ilibrary.org, and do not hesitate to contact us for more information.
Corporate Governance
of Listed Companies
in China
SELF-ASSESSMENT BY THE CHINA SECURITIES
REGULATORY COMMISSION
This work is published on the responsibility of the Secretary-General of the OECD. The
opinions expressed and arguments employed herein do not necessarily reflect the official
views of the Organisation or of the governments of its member countries.
ISBN 978-92-64-11908-6 (print)
ISBN 978-92-64-11920-8 (PDF)
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Please cite this publication as:
OECD (2011), Corporate Governance of Listed Companies in China: Self-Assessment by the China Securities
Regulatory Commission, OECD Publishing.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264119208-en
FOREWORD
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 3
This Report looks at the institutional framework of corporate governance in China
through the prism of the OECD Principles of Corporate Governance and is a product of
the ongoing OECD-China Policy Dialogue on Corporate Governance. By assessing a
broad range of laws, regulations and codes, it provides a valuable reference for
understanding how much has been achieved in Chinese corporate governance and the
main ambition of future reform efforts. The Report shows that corporate governance has
improved significantly since the Chinese stock market was created in 1990, with
important achievements in establishing and developing the legal and regulatory
framework.
In preparing the Report, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has,
together with other relevant agencies and ministries, accomplished a major body of work
and taken it through a process of extensive consultation and inter-agency drafting. OECD
considers this an important achievement; a tangible sign of China’s commitment to
excellence and testimony to its readiness to continue the modernization of the country’s
capital markets and corporate governance practices.
Throughout the drafting process, the OECD Secretariat, as well as national
representatives from the OECD Corporate Governance Committee, have been engaged in
workshops and policy discussions with their Chinese counterparts. In November 2010,
the full Committee had an opportunity to discuss the report in-depth with a Chinese
delegation and was impressed with the breadth and depth of the legal and regulatory
framework that China has established in the area of corporate governance.
The Committee noted that the corporate governance framework in China is
developing and adapting to the country’s economic transformation. As market discipline
is still evolving, the role played by the formal legal and regulatory framework remains
essential for building an efficient and competitive capital market.
Given China’s concentrated ownership structure, potential conflicts of interest
between majority and minority shareholders remain a core corporate governance issue. It
is therefore very useful that the Report looks at the issues of equitable treatment of
shareholders and mechanisms to prevent abusive related party transactions. The Report is
also helpful in identifying mechanisms for shareholder redress. On a related topic, the
Committee pointed to the challenges of coordinating the multiple roles played by state
entities – as shareholders, regulators and managers.
In terms of provision of information to the market, the Report demonstrates the
importance China attaches to improving disclosure and transparency. This includes the
introduction of low-cost dissemination channels and ensuring that Chinese accounting
and auditing standards are of high quality and aligned with international standards. The
Committee took an interest in China’s dual board system, the board of directors and
supervisory board. The Report emphasises board composition and duties. In particular,
FOREWORD
4 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
the discussion highlighted the importance of providing information to investors about the
board and senior management selection process.
China – like all other countries around the world – faces the continuous challenge of
ensuring that its corporate governance laws and regulations are translated into good
corporate practice. Ultimately, the rules and laws on paper must be effectively
implemented in order to make a difference. This is a long-term commitment that will
benefit from constant attention to the quality of the legal system; the presence of self-
regulatory organizations and cooperation with international institutions. For China,
priority areas for attention may include: curbing abusive related party transactions,
enhancing the quality of boards, improving shareholder protection and curbing market
abuse. It may also be useful to devote special attention to the all-important issue of how
to improve effective implementation and enforcement.
To conclude, the OECD Corporate Governance Committee considered the discussion
of China’s self-assessment an important and timely exercise. Members of the OECD
Corporate Governance Committee were also pleased to participate when the Report was
launched at the OECD Asian Roundtable on Corporate Governance in Shanghai, which
was kindly hosted by the CSRC and the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges in
December 2010.
Building on this Report, bilateral cooperation between China and the OECD will
continue to enhance the understanding of China’s corporate governance system and how
it impacts on company and investor behaviour. As a consequence, the OECD Corporate
Governance Committee looks forward to further strengthening of cooperation and a
mutually beneficial dialogue with Chinese authorities in the area of corporate governance.
Acknowledgements
The OECD would like to extend sincere gratitude to the Government of Japan for
their generous financial support of the OECD-China Policy Dialogue on Corporate
Governance.
CONTRIBUTORS
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 5
Corporate Governance of Listed Companies in China
Editorial Committee
Chairman SHANG Fulin
Vice chairmen GUI Minjie, LI Xiaoxue, ZHUANG Xinyi
YAO Gang, LIU Xinhua, JIANG Yang
ZHU Congjiu, WU Lijun
Members YANG Hua, TONG Daochi, QI Bin,
ZHAO Zhengping, WANG Lin,
ZHANG Sining, HUANG Wei,
JIAO Jinhong, SUN Shuming, LIU Hongtao
ZHANG Sheffeng, ZHANG Yujun,
SONG Liping, YU Jianhua, YU Baoheng
Consulting Committee
MA Mingzhe, WANG Shi, WANG Wei, WANG Dongming,
NING Xiangdong, LIU Hongru, SU Shulin, LI Yang,
LI Zhaoxi, LI Weian, XIAO Gang, ZHANG Weiying,
ZHANG Xinwen, CHEN Qingtai, LIN Yixiang, JIN Liyang,
HU Ruyin, JIA Xiaoliang, XU Lejiang, GUO Guangchang,
GUO Shuqing, LU Guangiu
CONTRIBUTORS
6 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
Drafting Team
Team Leander YANG Hua
Deputy Leaders OUYANG Zehua, ZHAO Lixin,
CAI Jianchun, AN Qingsong, YAN Bojin
LIU Yan
Members HUANG Ming, ZHANG Weidong,
PAN Chunsheng, ZHU Huan, GAO Li,
JIANG Xinghui, SUN Hongxia,
JIANG Xueyue, CHEN Zhaohui
HUANG Jianshan, YONG Xu,
REN Shunying, SHE Jiangxuan,
REN Wei, ZHOU Hongda
OECD Experts Team
OECD Corporate Affairs Division:
Grant Kirkpatrick, Fianna Jesover
OECD Corporate Governance Committee:
Ben Cushman, Magda Bianco
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 7
Preface
by Shang Fulin, Chairman, China Securities Regulatory Commission ……………………………. 9
Preface
by Richard Boucher, Deputy Secretary-General, OECD ……………………………………………….. 11
Chapter 1. The corporate governance framework in China ………………………………………………. 13
1.1 The history and development of corporate governance in China …………………………………….. 13
1.2 The legal framework of corporate governance for listed companies in China …………………… 18
1.3 Institutional framework for the corporate governance of listed companies in China………….. 24
Notes …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 28
Chapter 2. Shareholders’ rights ………………………………………………………………………………………. 29
2.1 Introduction to shareholders’ rights ……………………………………………………………………………. 29
2.2 China’s practices compared with OECD principles ………………………………………………………. 29
Chapter 3. The equitable treatment of shareholders …………………………………………………………. 41
3.1 Introduction to the equitable treatment of shareholders …………………………………………………. 41
3.2 China’s practices compared with OECD principles ………………………………………………………. 42
Chapter 4. Information disclosure …………………………………………………………………………………… 51
4.1 Introduction to information disclosure ………………………………………………………………………… 51
4.2 China’s practices compared with OECD principles ………………………………………………………. 55
Chapter 5. Board and supervisory board: responsibility and supervision ………………………….. 77
5.1 Overview of the board of directors and supervisory board system in China …………………….. 77
5.2 China’s practices compared with the OECD principles …………………………………………………. 80
Chapter 6.
……………………………………………… 95
6.1 China’s legal guarantee for the protection of stakeholder interests………………………………….. 95
6.2 China’s practices compared with the OECD principles …………………………………………………. 99
�
PREFACE BY SHANG FULIN
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 9
Preface
by
SHANG Fulin
Chairman, China Securities Regulatory Commission
This year marks the 20th anniversary of the Chinese capital market. In the past two
decades, it has started from scratch and experienced an extraordinary growth with market
size increasing from small to big and market coverage from regional to nationwide,
playing an important role in the national economic and social development. The
development of the capital market has promoted the establishment of a modern enterprise
system in China. Listed companies, outstanding representatives of Chinese enterprises,
are the corner stone of sound capital market development. The improved governance
system and higher governance level of listed companies have consolidated the foundation
of the capital market, increased its attractiveness and vitality, given an effective boost to
the capital market’s role in optimising resource allocation and promoted the healthy and
steady development of the Chinese capital market.
Corporate governance in China has been explored and established in the process of
state-owned enterprises reform and private enterprises growth. Corporate governance
experience and model with Chinese characteristics have come into being in light of the
actual situation in China. It has developed under the joint effort of the government and
market participants, with the former playing a leading role in the construction and
improvement of the corporate governance legal framework. Although China has started
the creation of a legal system for corporate governance rather lately, the system has
developed fairly quickly and increasingly full-fledged. The China Securities Regulatory
Commission (CSRC) has all along identified the improvement of corporate governance as
a priority, adopted various strong measures in the areas of independent directorship,
information disclosure, interest related party transaction, general shareholders’ meeting,
merger and acquisition and reorganization and investor protection within the framework
of the Company Law and the Securities Law, and issued a series of department rules and
normative documents, including Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies,
Regulations on Information Disclosure of Listed Companies, Guidelines on Articles of
Association of Listed Companies, Rules on Shareholders’ Meetings of Listed Companies,
Guiding Opinions on the Establishment of the System of Independent directors in Listed
Companies, Provisions on Strengthening the Protection of the Rights and Interests of
Public Shareholders, Regulations on the Takeover of Listed Companies, Regulations on
Major Asset Reorganization of Listed Companies, and Regulations on Option Incentives
of Listed Companies (Trial) etc. The formulation and implementation of these regulatory
provisions and normative documents have greatly promoted the corporate governance
reform process and facilitated the improvement of corporate governance level of listed
companies. Meanwhile, pushed by the CSRC, a special campaign was launched as of
2005 for listed companies to conduct non-tradable share reform, clear off outstanding
PREFACE BY SHANG FULIN
10 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
debts from controlling shareholders and improve corporate governance. The campaign
has consolidated the market foundation and is of great practical significance to build up
market confidence and encourage steady investment growth.
The development of corporate governance practices in China and the constant
improvement of the relevant legal system offer useful information for other countries.
China also needs to further draw upon mature experiences of other countries and relevant
international organizations and objectively evaluate achievements and gaps. For this
reason, the CSRC and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) reached an agreement to cooperate on a joint corporate governance assessment
programme. As an international organization born to deal with challenges of economic
globalization, the OECD has all along committed itself to providing a platform for
governments to explore, develop and improve economic and social policies. The
organization has long-term experience in the field of corporate governance. Its Principles
of Corporate Governance provide a set of international standards for corporate
governance and have extensive influence in member states as one of the most influential
guidance on corporate governance in the world. The cooperation between the CSRC and
the OECD is designed to advance dialogue and communication between Chinese
corporate governance legal system and internationally accepted rules and therefore of
special significance for the exploration into a mode of compatibility between Chinese and
foreign corporate governances.
The OECD-China corporate governance joint assessment programme was formally
launched in 2009. Upon consulted arrangement between the two sides, the CSRC
working group completed a self-assessment report after meticulous discussions and
revisions, i.e., the present China Listed Company Corporate Governance Report. The
English edition of the report was presented to the OECD, which then provided feedbacks
and conducted a discussion about the report at its Corporate Governance Committee
meeting. The now finalized report describes the status of corporate governance in China,
covering shareholders’ rights, equal treatment of shareholders, information disclosure,
responsibility and supervision of the board of directors and the supervisory board,
stakeholders and corporate social responsibility. It features a detailed comparison
between Chinese corporate governance system and practices and the relevant OECD
principles.
The creation and development of Chinese corporate governance and other legal
systems governing companies have moved from drawing upon experiences of other
countries to finding its own corporate governance model. For a long time, China has
humbly learned from others on the basis of its national conditions and made active efforts
to integrate itself into the world economic system. Looking into the future, China will
take an active part in international rule-making. Dialogue and communication between
China and the world including cooperation between the CSRC and international
institutions will continue and expand comprehensively, which will be very much
beneficial for Chinese enterprises to go global and for foreign enterprises to invest in
China.
SHANG Fulin
Chairman of China Securities Regulatory Commission
PREFACE BY RICHARD BOUCHER
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 11
Preface
by
Richard Boucher
Deputy Secretary-General, OECD
For more than twenty years, Chinese authorities have worked hard to build a stronger
corporate governance framework as part of accelerated enterprise reform and capital
market development. Indeed, since the stock market was established in 1990, the
corporate governance framework has been transformed and capital markets have
developed dynamically. New institutions have been created and many new laws and
regulations have been adopted – and this process continues.
In this Self-Assessment, the Chinese Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC)
presents China’s laws and regulations by reference to the OECD Principles of Corporate
Governance. The assessment documents how much has been accomplished, and points
out the direction for further development. The report was thoroughly discussed by the
OECD Corporate Governance Committee which was impressed by the breadth and depth
of the legal and regulatory framework that has been developed by the Chinese authorities.
All aspects of the Principles are addressed.
The Self-Assessment is an important and timely benchmarking exercise. The OECD
is very pleased that it is being launched at the OECD Asian Roundtable on Corporate
Governance in Shanghai, hosted by the CSRC and the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock
Exchanges. The Self-Assessment will contribute to better understanding and exchange of
experience among all the jurisdictions in the region.
Going forward, China – like many other countries around the world – faces the
challenge of ensuring that its laws and regulations are translated into changed corporate
practice. This is a key issue for many authorities who seek to sustain capital market and
corporate development and has become central to the OECD Committee’s work.
This report is a key output of the OECD-China Policy Dialogue on Corporate
Governance that began in 2004 and has proven very successful in promoting mutual
understanding and supporting China’s reform agenda. The OECD looks forward to
continuing to deepen our partnership with China in improving corporate governance.
Richard Boucher
Deputy Secretary-General, OECD
1. THE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK IN CHINA
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 13
Chapter 1
The corporate governance framework in China
1.1 The history and development of corporate governance in China
Corporate governance in China has emerged and developed as China has shifted from
a planned economy to a market economy. The establishment and growth of China’s
capital market and the evolution of Chinese enterprises from government affiliates to
modern companies have made it necessary to establish a new corporate governance
framework.
Until 1978, most Chinese enterprises were state-owned. A major characteristic of the
state-owned enterprise management mechanism was its administration-driven, unified
and collective governance. Enterprises were mainly managed by “administrative” means
and ranked in accordance with the levels of government concerned and the size and
affiliation of the company. Corporate production plans were not decided by the market,
but by the government according to a national plan and its sub-plans. Business
performance was measured by the number of planned targets that were met, rather than
by the market value realised. Political entitlement was the major incentive for managers
and employees. Managers had no independence in business activities, nor could they
share the fruits of successful business operations, and therefore lacked the drive to
improve enterprise management. As managers’ autonomy and corresponding
administrative ranks were mainly decided by the size and economic resources of their
companies, they were inclined to expand the size of the enterprise while paying little
attention to its business performance.
Economic reform progressed in China’s urban areas after the Third Plenary Session
of the 11th Communist Party of China’s (CPC) National Congress in 1978. The
centrepiece of the reform was the revitalisation of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to
make them more efficient by restructuring the old enterprise system. Spawned by the
reform of SOEs, China’s attention to corporate governance grew as the SOEs strived to
put a modern enterprise system in place. China’s corporate governance made steady
progress as more and more companies were listed.
China’s corporate governance development to date has been a 30-year process that
can be divided into four phases.
1.1.1 Phase 1: From 1978 to 1984
The major feature of this phase was decentralisation. In 1979, the State Council
promulgated a number of rules and regulations on reforming the enterprises’ management
1. THE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK IN CHINA
14 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
mechanism. These new rules were geared to readjust the relationship between the state
and its enterprises, to give SOE managers more freedom in business activities, and to
replace the state’s direct administrative control over the SOEs with a management model
in which direct state control is supplemented by economic incentives. Favourable
measures in terms of fixed-asset investment, asset depreciation and working capital
management were provided to the SOEs to expand their incentives for better business
performance. Pilot programmes to enhance SOEs’ business independence were
introduced and their successful experiences were summarised and formulated into the
SOE Management Responsibility System in 1981, which was set by the state as the goal
of SOE management mechanism reform.
1.1.2 Phase 2: From 1984 to 1992
The major feature of this phase was the change in SOEs’ profit distribution and the
formation of the management responsibility system. Before the reform1, SOEs’ profits
were all claimed by the state. After the reform, the profits of large and medium-sized
SOEs were taxed, after-tax profits were shared by the state and enterprises, and the “SOE
Manager Accountability Mechanism” was put in place. In 1984, the idea that the
ownership and management of state-owned enterprises could be separated as appropriate
was suggested for the first time. In 1986, the CPC Central Committee, together with the
State Council, issued a number of documents, including the Terms of Reference for
Managers of State-owned Industrial Enterprises, explicitly stipulating that the manager is
a company’s representative of a legal personality, and a new type of corporate leadership
system featuring “overall responsibility of the manager, a supervisory and guarantee role
for the company’s CPC subcommittee, and democratic management by the employees”
was also established.
From 1987 onwards, the transformation of the SOEs’ operational mechanism became
the priority of SOE reform. According to the principle that ownership and management of
companies can be separated, a major reform of SOEs’ business operation models was
initiated and a contract-based responsibility system2 was set up. In the transitional period
from a planned to a market-based economy, the contract responsibility system played a
positive role in guaranteeing the steady growth of government revenue, promoting the
separation of enterprise ownership from management, and the separation of government
from enterprises, providing SOE employees with greater autonomy and incentives, and
making SOE development more sustainable. But experience has shown that the contract
responsibility system had embedded weaknesses too, mainly in that it failed to avoid the
short-term performance oriented behaviors. The basis of the contracts was often
arbitrarily decided and was neither fair nor objective: the contractors shared the gains
when the enterprises were profitable but were not personally liable when they incurred
losses. The system failed to find a fully satisfactory solution to the challenge of separating
the role of the government from enterprises.
In July 1992, the State Council formulated and promulgated the Regulation on the
Transformation of Operational Mechanisms of Industrial Enterprises Owned by the
Whole People, delegating 14 independent powers of operation to SOEs, thereby
accelerating the pace at which SOEs moved from a planned economy to a market
economy.
1. THE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK IN CHINA
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 15
1.1.3 Phase 3: From 1993 to 2003
The establishment of a modern enterprise system was at the core of SOE reform
during this phase. In 1993, it was made clear that “efforts need to be made to transform
the SOE management mechanism and establish a modern enterprise system that suits the
needs of a market economy, with clearly defined ownership, rights and responsibilities,
and features the separation of government from enterprises and scientific management.
Modern enterprises can have many organisational forms based on the composition of
capital. Practising the corporate system in SOEs proved to be a useful way to start
building a modern enterprise system.”
The Company Law, which was promulgated in December 1993, provided legal
support to the establishment of a modern enterprise system and laid the groundwork for
China’s corporate governance framework. China made the decision to define its basic
economic system as one in which state ownership is the main feature, with the common
development of diverse forms of ownership. In line with this definition, efforts were
made on two fronts. Firstly, SOE reform and structural adjustment of the national
economy were accelerated towards the direction of building a system in which enterprises
would become legal entities responsible for their own business operations, profitability,
development, self-discipline, and risk portfolio as real market players. Some SOEs were
restructured into limited liability companies or limited joint-stock companies. With
articles of association drafted, shareholders’ meetings, boards of directors, and
supervisory boards established, and senior management appointed, a basic framework for
a corporate governance structure had taken shape. Secondly, as the non-state sector of the
economy was elevated from a previously subordinate position to one of importance on a
par with the public sector, the policy and institutional obstacles limiting its rapid
development were removed. As a result, the number of non-state firms has continued to
grow steadily.
Since the early 1990s, a nationwide capital market with stock exchanges acting as the
main agent has gradually developed and the number of listed companies has grown
exponentially. Most of the listed companies were restructured SOEs that had gone
through shareholding reform. As the state or state-owned companies still held controlling
shares of those listed companies, many of the old SOE management styles and
mechanisms were maintained. Meanwhile, as the number of listed non-state holding
companies grew, so their governance increasingly became an issue. The improvement of
the corporate governance of listed companies was a major item on the agenda of China’s
capital market development at that time.
In 2001, China joined the World Trade Organisation and undertook to adopt the
OECD Principles of Corporate Governance and improve corporate governance of
Chinese listed companies.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) and the National Economic
and Trade Commission jointly issued the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed
Companies in early 2002. This document is based on the OECD Corporate Governance
Principles and gives particular consideration to the circumstances and outstanding issues
of listed companies in China. It expounds on the basic principles of corporate governance,
the means to achieve investor protection, and the basic code of conduct and professional
ethics that need to be observed by directors, supervisors, managers and other executives
of listed companies.
1. THE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK IN CHINA
16 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
1.1.4 Phase 4: From 2004 to present
Historical constraints to good governance of listed companies started to be gradually
addressed from 2004 onwards. With the help of government regulators, such as those
represented by the CSRC, the level of corporate governance among listed companies has
been constantly improving. The State Council issued Opinions on Promoting the Reform,
Opening and Steady Growth of Capital Markets in January 2004, clarifying the strategic
importance of capital markets in national economic development and charting the course
for resolving some long-standing problems. In April 2005 the CSRC, under the guidance
of the State Council, introduced a reform designed to address the issue of non-tradability
of certain shares held by a company’s shareholders, a residual problem from the period
before the companies went public. The smooth progress of this reform successfully
solved the problem of dividing interests and prices among the state-owned shares,
institutional shares and tradable shares in a company’s share structure, and enabled equal
rights to the trading of and earnings on shares among all categories of shareholders. All
categories of shares are now valued by the market mechanism, which constitutes the basis
for common interests among all categories of shareholders.
The Company Law and the Securities Law, both introduced in 2006, provide the
foundation for drawing up and developing a corporate governance framework in China.
The revised Company Law improved companies’ governance structure and mechanisms
to protect lawful shareholders’ rights and public interests. It highlighted the legal
obligations and responsibilities of those in actual control of the company – the directors,
senior management and supervisors. It improved companies’ financing and financial
accounting systems of companies and the systems governing corporate mergers, divisions
and liquidation. While ensuring the lawful rights and interests of the creditors are well
protected, it facilitated the reorganisation of companies.
The revised Securities Law improved the system governing the issuance, trading,
registration and settlement of securities and provided for the establishment of multi-tiered
capital-market architecture. It improved the supervision of listed companies, made
issuance examination more transparent, established the mechanism of introducing a
system for recommending/sponsoring listing. It also increased the legal responsibilities
and rules on integrity obligations of the controlling shareholders or those actually in
control, namely the directors, supervisors and senior management of listed companies.
The revised law strengthened investor protection, especially for minority investors,
established a securities investor protection fund, and defined the system of civil
responsibility to compensate for damages to investors. Following the revision, related
agencies made corresponding adjustments to other relevant laws, regulations and criterion
documents to ensure that they better reflect market rules.
The state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State
Council carried out corporatisation reforms of large central government SOEs and piloted
the establishment of boards of directors according to the Company Law and in light of the
OECD Guidelines on Corporate Governance of State-Owned Enterprises.
The issue of fund misappropriation by major shareholders and other related parties
was a problem that seriously affected the healthy development of listed companies. To
address this issue effectively, the CSRC drafted regulations imposing a strict limitation on
fund misappropriation in listed companies by controlling shareholders and other related
parties. It conducted pilot programmes on “shares for debt” and co-operated with local
governments and other relevant agencies to deal with the difficult problem of debt
repayment arrears. At the same time, it focused on the establishment of a long-term
1. THE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK IN CHINA
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 17
mechanism to forestall new debt repayment arrears while old arrears were being repaid.
The Criminal Law was amended to inflict greater penalties on major shareholders and
actual controllers involved in fund misappropriation of listed companies. This problem
was essentially resolved by the end of 2006.
Following the completion of the reform on non-tradable shares and collection of debt
repayment arrears, in March 2007 the CSRC launched a three-year campaign to
strengthen the governance of listed companies. During the campaign, listed companies
looked into existing problems in corporate governance and conducted in-depth, effective
rectification of misappropriation of company funds by major shareholders, incomplete
separation of funds and personnel between a listed company and its controlling
shareholder, irregular operations of listed companies’ boards of directors, shareholders’
meetings and supervisory boards, and inadequate internal controls.
During this campaign, the listed companies gained greater awareness of standard
operations and improved their level of governance, and some listed companies gradually
introduced effective corporate governance models adapted to their companies.
1. Listed companies were marked by greater independence and the diversification of
directors has started to play an important role in the constant improvement of
corporate governance and internal controls.
2. Operations of the board of directors, supervisory board and general shareholders’
meeting are more standard and effective. Online voting at general shareholders’
meetings has increased and the use of accumulative voting is more extensive. The
rules of procedures for board meetings are more standardised and relevant
decision-making more scientific. The functions of the board of directors’
specialized committees have been further strengthened, with many companies
adopting work procedures, detailed responsibilities and clarified procedures for
the specialized committees.
3. The system of internal control has been further improved, with many listed
companies systematically sorting out and improving their internal controls by
drawing up rules and improving them where necessary.
4. The information disclosure systems of listed companies has become more fully
fledged and detailed. Meanwhile, companies are more likely to take the initiative
to disclose information with more in-depth and extensive coverage. They are also
more sensitive and respond faster to substantive information.
5. The management of investor relations has greatly improved. Most listed
companies have improved their investor relations management system, appointed
full-time staff responsible for investor relations, set up hotlines and designated
website modules for investors, and interact and exchange information with
investors on an irregular basis. They are also more active in implementing
corporate social responsibility.
The chart below shows the current Corporate Governance Framework of Listed
Companies in China:
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18 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
Concerning allocation and balance of company powers, four specific company organs
with power and work division are set up to form the organizational structure.
The general shareholders’ meeting is the power and decision-making organ of the
company and has decision making power concerning major issues. The board of directors
is the operational implementation organ of the company, being responsible to the general
shareholders’ meeting, and has the decision making power concerning management
issues under the authority of general shareholders’ meeting. The board of directors may,
according to the resolution of the general shareholders’ meeting, set up special
committees, such as strategy committee, auditing committee, nomination committee,
remuneration and appraisal committee, etc., The management is responsible to the board
of directors, and is in charge of the daily operation and management of the company. The
supervisory board is the supervision organ of the company, which supervises whether
directors and managers violate laws or articles of association of the company when
accomplishing corporate duties, and is entitled to inspect company’s finance.
1.2 The legal framework of corporate governance for listed companies in China
China’s legal framework for corporate governance comprises four levels: basic laws,
administrative regulations, regulatory provisions, and self-disciplinary rules.
The first level comprises some fundamental laws, formulated either by the National
People’s Congress or its Standing Committee. They include the Company Law, the
General Shareholders’ Meeting
Board of Directors Supervisory Board
Special Committees
Management
Stakeholders
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Securities Law, the Criminal Law Amendment Act (6), the Law on the State-Owned Assets
of Enterprises and the Accounting Law.
The second level includes State Council administrative regulations, notably: Opinions
on Promoting the Reform, Opening and Steady Growth of Capital Markets, Circular of
the State Council on its Approval of the CSRC’s Opinion on Improving the Quality of
Listed Companies.
The third level involves departmental provisions formulated by the Ministries,
Commissions, the People’s Bank of China, the Auditing Administration and other
agencies with administrative jurisdiction directly under the State Council. These include:
the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies, Regulations on Information
Disclosure of Listed Companies, Guidelines on Articles of Association of Listed
Companies, Rules on Shareholders’ Meetings of Listed Companies, Guiding Opinions on
the Establishment of the System of Independent Directors in Listed Companies,
Provisions on Strengthening the Protection of the Rights and Interests of Public
Shareholders, Regulations on the Takeover of Listed Companies, Regulations on Major
Asset Reorganisation of Listed Companies, Regulations on Option Incentives of Listed
Companies (Trial), Regulations on the Registration and Settlement of Securities.
The fourth level of self-disciplinary rules refers to the Rules on Listing Stocks and
Trading Rules made by the stock exchanges, among others.
When the laws, regulations and rules at various levels are drafted, the legislature or
competent administrative departments generally carry out in-depth research and
implement the relevant legal procedures strictly to solicit a broad scope of opinions
through round-table discussions, argumentation, consultation and comments so that
individual citizens and market entities are able to express their views directly or through
their representatives, thereby safeguarding their legitimate rights and interests.
Perpetrators of irregularities and violations in corporate governance shall be held
accountable for the relevant administrative, civil and criminal responsibilities. The CSRC
may deliver administrative sanctions, such as warnings, fines, disqualification and
banning the entry into the securities market of the companies and individuals responsible
for violations. Those suspected of a criminal offence shall be transferred to the judicial
departments to ascertain criminal liability. The company registration department and
other competent departments may also punish violating companies, intermediaries and
persons responsible by ordering them to return company property, confiscating the illicit
gains, imposing a fine, cancelling company registration and revoking a business licence,
ordering intermediaries to stop business operations and revoking qualification certificates
of those directly responsible. Furthermore, shareholders may also, according to law, file
lawsuits against those persons and institutions that have undermined the legitimate rights
and interests of the company and its shareholders and claim civil damage. Companies in
violation shall undertake the responsibility of civil compensation and pay the fines. When
assets are insufficient, civil damage compensation shall be paid out first. Criminal
responsibility shall be investigated when a criminal offence is involved.
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1.2.1 Basic laws
1.2.1.1 Company Law (2006)
The Company Law (2006) is formulated to standardise the organisation and behaviour
of companies, to protect the legitimate rights and interests of companies, shareholders and
creditors, safeguard socioeconomic order and promote the development of a socialist
market economy. It governs the incorporation and organisational structure of limited
liability companies, equity transfers of limited liability companies, the incorporation,
organisational structure, issuance and transfer of shares of companies limited by shares,
the qualifications and obligations of company directors, supervisors and senior
executives, corporate bonds, corporate finance and accounting, company mergers, splits,
capital increases and reductions, company dissolution and clearance, branches of foreign
companies and legal liabilities.
1.2.1.2 Securities Law (2006)
The Securities Law (2006) was drawn up to standardise securities issues and
transactions, protect the legitimate rights and interests of investors, safeguard socio-
economic order and public interests and promote the development of a socialist market
economy. It governs securities issues, securities transactions, general provisions, listing
of securities, disclosure of information, prohibited transactions, acquisition of a listed
company, stock exchanges, securities companies, securities registration and clearance
institutions, securities service organisations, securities industry associations, securities
regulatory institution and legal liabilities.
1.2.1.3 Criminal Law Amendment Act (6) (2006)
Amendment VI to the Criminal Law (2006) was designed to match the amended
Securities Law and Company Law, to give a more complete definition of legal liabilities
in the securities field, improve the laws governing the securities market and promote its
healthy development. The Amendment governs the following corporate governance-
related offences: disclosure breaches, non-disclosure of major information, breach of trust
and damage of listed company’s interests, insider trading and leakage of insider
information and manipulation of securities or futures market.
1.2.1.4 Law on the State-Owned Assets of Enterprises (2009)
The Law on the State-Owned Assets of Enterprises
3
(2009) was promulgated to
safeguard the country’s basic economic system, to consolidate and develop the state-
owned sector, strengthen the protection of state-owned assets, allow the state-owned
sector to play a dominant role in the national economy, and promote the development of a
socialist market economy. The Law governs the institution that performs the function of
investor, enterprises with funds from the state, the selection managers of enterprises
funded by the state and the assessment of their performance, significant matters bearing
on the rights and interests of the investor of state-owned assets, operational budgets of
state-owned assets, supervision of state-owned assets and legal liabilities.
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1.2.1.5 Accounting Law (2000)
The Accounting Law (2000) was introduced to standardise accounting behaviour,
ensure the truthfulness and completeness of accounting materials, strengthen economic
administration and financial management, improve economic performance and safeguard
the order of the socialist market economy. This law lays out requirements regarding
accounting practices, special provisions on companies’ accounting practices, accounting
supervision, accounting offices, accounting personnel, and legal liability.
1.2.2 Administrative regulations and regulatory documents
1.2.2.1 Regulations on the Administration of Company Registration (2005)
These regulations provide for the confirmation that a company qualifies as a legal
personality, standardised company registration and complete and standardised provisions
concerning the establishment, alteration and termination of companies in terms of
registration, registered items, registration of establishments, changes and cancellations, as
well as registration procedures.
1.2.2.2 Opinions on Promoting the Reform, Opening-up and Steady Growth of
Capital Markets (2004)
These opinions focus on the need to fully appreciate the importance of capital market
development, the guiding ideology and tasks for promoting reform, and the opening-up
and steady growth of capital markets. Efforts need to be made to improve relevant
policies to promote the steady growth of capital markets. The structure of capital markets
needs to be optimised and the range of investment securities expanded. The quality of
listed companies needs to be improved and their operation should be standardised. Efforts
should be made to promote the standardisation of intermediaries in the capital markets
and strengthen their professional skills. The development and integrity of the legal system
need to be promoted to raise the level of supervision over capital markets. Emphasis
should be put on co-ordinated efforts to fend off and monitor market risks. Past
experiences and lessons learned should be reviewed to steadily promote implementation
of the opening-up policy.
1.2.2.3 Circular of the State Council on its Approval of the CSRC’s Opinion on
Improving the Quality of Listed Companies (2005)
This document discusses how improving the quality of listed companies must be
viewed as a priority. Corporate governance must be improved to enhance listed
companies’ business performance and management and raise their level of standardised
operations. Efforts need to be made to address both the symptoms and root causes of the
quality issues pertaining to listed companies, especially related to outstanding problems.
Effective measures must be taken to help listed companies grow and excel. Their
supervision and management mechanisms must be improved and regulatory co-ordination
must be strengthened. Better leadership and guidance should be provided to create a
favourable environment for the healthy development of listed companies.
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1.2.3 Regulatory provisions and normative documents
1.2.3.1 Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies (2002)
The Code of Corporate Governance for Listed Companies (2002) was drawn up in
line with the basic principles established by the original Company Law, Securities Law
and other relevant laws and regulations, and has made a positive contribution to
promoting listed companies in China to establish and improve a modern enterprise
system, standardise their operations and promote the healthy development of the
securities market. The Code governs shareholders and shareholders’ meetings, listed
companies and controlling shareholders, directors and board of directors, supervisors and
the supervisory board, performance assessment and incentive and disciplinary systems,
stakeholders, and information disclosure and transparency. The Code comprises the main
measurement criteria used to judge whether a listed company has a sound corporate
governance structure. The securities regulatory institution has the power to order the
listed companies that have major problems in corporate governance to remedy them
according to the Code. The CSRC is making active preparations to amend the Code,
along with the amendments to the Company Law, Securities Law and other relevant laws
and regulations, in order to adapt to the changed market environment, enhance the
effectiveness of listed-company governance, encourage them to improve quality and
promote the healthy development of Chinese capital markets.
1.2.3.2 Regulations on Listed Companies’ Information Disclosure (2007)
These regulations set out the requirements and listing particulars for the issuance of
an Initial Public Offering (IPO) prospectus, offering circular, periodic reports, ad-hoc
reports, information disclosure management, supervision and legal liability.
1.2.3.3 Guidance on Listed Companies’ Articles of Association (2006)
This document provides guidance on business purposes and scope, shares,
shareholders and shareholders’ meetings, boards of directors, managers and other
executives, supervisory boards, financial and accounting systems, profit distribution and
auditing, public announcements and notices, mergers, divestments, capital increases and
reductions, dissolution and liquidation, and revision of the articles of association.
1.2.3.4 Rules on Listed Companies’ Shareholders’ Meetings (2006)
These rules relate to the convening of shareholders’ meetings, their resolutions and
related notifications, and supervisory measures.
1.2.3.5 Guiding Opinions on the Establishment of the System of Independent
Directors in Listed Companies (2001)
These opinions provide guidance on independent directors, who must truly be
independent and have the necessary qualifications to perform their duties. The
nomination, election and appointment of independent directors must be conducted
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according to the law and relevant regulations. Listed companies must accord the
appropriate importance to independent directors and the role they play. Independent
directors must have independent opinions on major issues affecting the listed company,
which shall provide its independent directors with the required conditions to fulfil their
roles.
1.2.3.6 Provisions on Strengthening the Protection of the Rights and Interests of
Public Shareholders (2004)
These provisions cover the introduction of a trial public shareholder voting system on
major issues pertaining to a company and the enhancement of the independent directors
system, giving more importance to the role played by independent directors. They also
seek to improve investor relations management and raise the quality of information
disclosure by listed companies, including those with active profit distribution plans, and
to reinforce the supervision of listed companies and their senior management.
1.2.3.7 Regulations on the Takeover of Listed Companies (2006)
These regulations outline listed companies’ requirements in relation to the disclosure
of rights and interests, tender offers, block purchases, indirect purchases, exemption
applications, financial advisors, ongoing supervision, supervisory measures and legal
liability.
1.2.3.8 Regulations on Major Asset Reorganisation of Listed Companies (2008)
These regulations outline listed companies’ requirements in relation to the principles
and standards, procedures and information management governing major asset
reorganisation. They also include special provisions on issuing shares for asset purchase,
applications for issuing new shares or company bonds after a major asset reorganisation,
supervision management and legal liability.
1.2.3.9 Regulations on Equity Incentives of Listed Companies (Trial) (2005)
These regulations outline listed companies’ requirements in relation to general
provisions, restricted shares, stock options, implementation procedures and information
disclosure, supervision and penalties for breaches of regulations.
1.2.3.10 Regulations on the Registration and Settlement of Securities (2006)
These regulations outline listed companies’ requirements regarding institutions in
charge of registering and settling securities, managing security accounts, trusteeship and
depository of securities, the clearance and delivery of securities and money, risk
prevention and handling delivery defaults.
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1.2.3.11 Basic Standard for Enterprise Internal Control (2008)
The Basic Standard covers the objectives, principles and elements that enterprises
should establish and implement regarding internal controls, internal environments, risk
assessment, control activities, information and communication, and internal supervision.
1.2.4 Self-disciplinary rules
1.2.4.1 Rules Governing the Listing of Stocks on the Shanghai Stock
Exchange (2008), Rules Governing the Listing of Stocks on the Shenzhen Stock
Exchange (2008)
These rules cover: the general principles and provisions on information disclosure,
directors, supervisors and senior management, appointed advisers/investment banks,
listing of stocks and convertible bonds, periodic reports, general provisions on ad-hoc
reports, resolutions of boards of directors, boards of supervisors and shareholders’
meetings, transactions requiring disclosure, related-party transactions, other material
matters, suspension and restoration of trading, special treatment, suspension, resumption
and termination of listing, applications for review, co-ordination between domestic and
overseas listings, day-to-day regulation and dealing with breaches of these rules.
1.2.4.2 Trading Rules of the Shanghai Stock Exchange (2006), Trading Rules of
the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (2006)
These rules cover: the trading market, securities trading, other trading-related matters,
trading information, supervision of trading activities, handling extraordinary
circumstances during trading, trading disputes, trading fees, disciplinary sanctions.
1.3 Institutional framework for the corporate governance of listed companies in
China
The institutional framework of China’s corporate governance is composed of three
parts: the CSRC, the agency in charge of securities and futures markets; corporate
governance-related government agencies, such as the Ministry of Finance, the state-
owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, General Administration of
Industry and Commerce, China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), and China
Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC); and stock exchanges and companies
registering and settling securities.
1.3.1 CSRC
The CSRC is a public institution directly under the State Council. Pursuant to relevant
laws and regulations, and with the mandate of the State Council, it performs a unified
regulatory function over China’s securities and futures markets to make sure that market
order is maintained and capital market operations comply with the law. CSRC is located
in Beijing and has 18 functional departments, one inspection division and three centres. It
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also has a public offering review committee and a merger and acquisition reorganisation
review committee, composed of both CSRC professionals and invited experts from
outside. The CSRC formally became a member of IOSCO in 1995, was elected as a
member of the Executive Committee, the IOSCO’s decision-making body, for the first
time in 1998, and has kept that position since then.
In February 2009, CSRC joined the IOSCO Technical Committee, the standard-
setting agency in international securities regulation. CSRC also co-operates actively and
extensively with securities regulators in other countries and regions.
The CSRC performs the following regulatory functions in the securities markets:
• devises the relevant rules, regulations and measures for the securities markets
according to law, and exercises the right to examine, approve and review
according to law; regulate the issuance, listing, trading, registration, custody and
settlement of securities according to law;
• supervises securities-related businesses of issuers of securities, listed companies,
stock exchanges, securities companies, securities registration and settlement
institutions, securities investment fund management companies, and securities
services organisations;
• formulates qualification standards and codes of conduct for securities
professionals and oversees their implementation, oversees and inspects the
issuance, listing and trading of securities and information disclosure, provides
guidance and supervision over the activities of securities-industry associations
according to law, deals with activities in violation of market supervision and
management laws and administrative regulations, and performs other duties as
provided for by law and administrative regulations. CSRC can enter into co-
operation with counterparts in other countries and regions and carry out cross-
border supervision.
The CSRC has established 36 securities regulatory bureaus in the provinces,
autonomous regions, municipalities directly under the Central Government and cities
specifically designated in the state plan. It also has a Shanghai Commissioner’s Office
and a Shenzhen Commissioner’s Office. With regard to the supervision of listed
companies, CSRC has established a local supervision responsibility system that features
“local supervision, clear responsibilities, individual accountability and mutual co-
operation”. This system has further clarified the terms of reference and positioning of the
local branches of CSRC, and their role as “on-site” supervisors, and made supervision
more timely, targeted and effective. Thanks to this system, regulatory resources have
been integrated and strengthened and the work of CSRC has been able to advance in
greater depth and with greater momentum.
In order to put the local supervision responsibility system into operation, CSRC has
accelerated the construction and improvement of the “comprehensive regulatory
framework for listed companies”, a framework that involves the participation of many
departments and local governments, which will make the regulatory work more
authoritative and effective. The main group responsible for “the comprehensive
regulatory framework for listed companies” is “the task force for standardised operations
of listed companies”. This inter-agency task force was established in April 2005 under the
mandate of the State Council and with the participation of representatives from
12 ministries including the National Development and Reform Commission, Ministry of
Public Security, Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Commerce, People’s Bank of China,
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state-owned Asset Supervision and Administration Commission, General Administration
of Customs, State Administration of Taxation, State Administration for Industry and
Commerce, China Banking Regulatory Commission, and China Insurance Regulatory
Commission. Its goal was to conduct a joint study on the major issues concerning the
standardisation of listed companies, co-ordinate the activities of various departments,
form regulatory synergy, and jointly promote standard practices among the listed
companies. The task force, since its inception, has accomplished a lot in building a
comprehensive regulatory system for listed companies, which is now in place. It has gone
a long way towards strengthening co-ordination among relevant supervisory authorities,
promoting the non-tradable share reform, preventing the misappropriation of funds by
majority shareholders of listed companies and promoting the standardisation of listed
companies.
The law enforcement structure of the CSRC comprises four aspects. First, the
enforcement bureau, whose main responsibilities include: organising, co-ordinating,
guiding and supervising the investigation of cases, case filing and review, enforcing
administrative punishment, cross-border law enforcement co-operation and anti-money
laundering. Second, the enforcement contingent’s major responsibilities include:
investigating major cases of insider trading, market manipulation and false statements and
other important, urgent or sensitive cases affecting a wide range of sectors and areas.
Third, local enforcement bureaus and their enforcement officials, whose major
responsibilities include investigating cases within their jurisdictions, informal
investigations and all sorts of co-operative investigation. Fourth, the administrative
disciplinary bureau, which takes care of the trial of all cases.
1.3.2 Government agencies with a role in corporate governance
1.3.2.1 The Ministry of Finance, a department of the State Council and its
responsibilities related to corporate governance mainly include:
1. Drafting laws and regulations pertaining to financial and accounting management,
devising and executing regulations and rules of financial and accounting
management.
2. Drafting distribution policies between the state and enterprises, managing central
government budget that is allocated to support enterprises, drafting and
organising the implementation of the General Rules of Finance for Enterprises,
supervising the financial affairs of enterprises reporting directly to Central
Government, managing the returns on state-owned assets, and administration over
the asset-appraisal industry.
3. Drafting and supervising the implementation of accounting rules and regulations
and the Accounting Standards for Business Enterprises, drafting and supervising
the implementation of the general government budget and the accounting system
governing administrative institutions and industries, guiding and supervising the
work of certified public accountants and accounting firms, guiding and managing
social auditing, and examining and approving the establishment of branches of
foreign accounting firms in China.
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1.3.2.2 The state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, a
special agency reporting directly to the State Council. Its responsibilities related
to corporate governance mainly include:
1. Authorised by the State Council, it performs shareholders’ responsibilities
according to the Company Law and other laws and administrative regulations,
supervises and manages the state-owned assets of the enterprises under the
supervision of the Central Government (excluding financial enterprises), and
enhances the management of state-owned assets.
2. It supervises the preservation and enhancement of the value of supervised
enterprises’ state-owned assets, including through statistics and auditing,
introducing a system that establishes targets/objectives and enhances the value of
state-owned assets. It also devises assessment criteria, is responsible for the
management of wages and remuneration of supervised enterprises, and drafts and
implements policies regulating the income distribution of their senior executives.
3. Guides and drives forward the reform and restructuring of state-owned
enterprises, advances the establishment of a modern SOE enterprise system,
improves corporate governance, and promotes the strategic adjustment of the
layout and structure of the national economy.
4. It names directors and supervisors to state-controlled companies and companies
with state-owned assets according to the relevant regulations and the respective
companies’ articles of association.
5. It is responsible for seeing to it that supervised enterprises turn state-owned
capital gains over to the state, participates in devising management systems and
methods for the state-owned capital operational budget, which it calculates and
implements along with the final accounts, in accordance with related regulations.
1.3.3 Stock exchanges and security registration and settlement company
1.3.3.1 Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges
The Shanghai Stock Exchange was founded on 26 November 1990 and the Shenzhen
Stock Exchange on 1 December 1990. Both are independent legal entities directly
governed by CSRC. They provide venues and facilities for centralised securities trading,
organise and supervise securities trading and exercise self-regulatory management. Their
functions include: providing a marketplace and facilities for securities trading; drawing
up business rules; accepting and arranging listings; organising and monitoring securities
trading; regulating members and listed companies; and managing and disseminating
market information.
1.3.3.2 China Securities Depository and Clearing Corporation Limited
Founded in 2001, the China Securities Depository and Clearing Corporation Limited
is a non-profit legal entity directly governed by the CSRC, providing centralised
registration, depository and settlement service for securities trading. Its main functions
include: establishing and managing securities and settlement accounts; providing a venue
for the depository and transfer of securities; registering securities holders’ names and
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rights; managing securities and financial clearing and settlement; distributing warrants on
behalf of issuers; providing securities registration and settlement of business-related
queries, information, advisory and training services according to laws.
Notes
1. Before 1983, SOEs turned their profits over to the government. With the progress of
the economic reform, the distributional relationship between the government and the
SOEs gradually changed to payment of tax by the latter according to the tax category,
item and rate specified by the relevant authorities since 1983.
2. The contract-based responsibility system was an operational and management system
that established the respective responsibility, rights and interests of the governments
and the SOEs in operational contracts according to the principle of separation of
ownership and operations, which allowed enterprises to operate independently and
shoulder responsibility for their own profits and losses while complying with socialist
public ownership.
3. State-owned assets of enterprises (simplified as “state-owned assets”) refer to the
rights and interests formed by funding in various forms from the state to the
enterprises.
2. SHAREHOLDERS’ RIGHTS
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 29
Chapter 2
Shareholders’ rights
2.1 Introduction to shareholders’ rights
A common practice of Chinese company law theorists is to divide the rights of
shareholders into “self-benefit rights” and “co-benefit rights” according to the purposes of
exercising the relevant right. The self-benefit right can also be called a beneficiary right,
referring to the shareholders’ right to seek to acquire economic benefits. These are
manifested as rights in economic benefits. Co-benefit rights can also be called
shareholders’ rights to govern or participate in the relevant company’s governance, and
are manifested as a number of shareholders’ rights to participate in the company’s
decision-making, operations, management, supervision and control.
As far as the Company Law is concerned, in China, shareholders’ self-benefit rights
include the right to request the distribution of a dividend, the right to request the
distribution of residual assets, the right to transfer shares and the right to request share
purchases. Shareholders’ co-benefit rights include the right to vote, the right to
shareholders’ representative action, the right to request or convene general meetings of
shareholders, proposal rights, enquiry rights, the right to revoke or confirm annulment of
decisions of the shareholders’ meeting, the right to revoke or confirm annulment of
decisions of the board of directors, inspection rights and cumulative voting rights.
2.2 China’s practices compared with OECD principles
2.2.1 Principle II A. Basic shareholder rights should include the right to:
(1) secure methods of ownership registration; (2) convey or transfer shares;
(3) obtain relevant and material information on the corporation on a timely and
regular basis; (4) participate and vote in general shareholders’ meetings;
(5) elect and remove members of the board; and (6) share in the profits of the
corporation.
2.2.1.1 Principle II. A (1): Secure methods of ownership registration
According to Article 157 of the Securities Law, a securities registration and clearing
institution performs the functions of custody and transfer of ownership of securities and
registration of the names of the security holders. The Law’s Articles 160 and 162 also
provide that on the basis of the results of securities registration and clearing, the
institution shall confirm the fact that particular securities are held by particular holders
and provide registered information on the security holders. It shall ensure the truthfulness,
2. SHAREHOLDERS’ RIGHTS
30 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
accuracy and completeness of the register of security holders and the records of
registration of change in ownership, that it may not forge, alter or destroy such register or
records. The securities registration and clearing institution also carefully preserves the
original evidence relating to registration, custody and clearing and important original
evidence shall be kept for a period of no less than 20 years. In the early 1990s China set
up securities depository and clearing institutions in Shenzhen and Shanghai and in 2001 a
merged institution was formed, the China Securities Depository and Clearing Corporation
Limited (SD&C). CSRC issued the Measures for the Administration of Securities
Registration and Clearing in April 2006, providing fairly complete regulations on the
registration of stock ownership. According to Article 28 of the Measures for the
Administration of Securities Registration and Clearing, after a security has been the
subject of a public offering, the issuer should submit to the securities registration and
clearing institution a list of securities owners and other relevant information on the
security issued. On this basis, the securities registration and clearing institution shall carry
out initial registration of the list of securities owners. The securities issuer shall guarantee
that the information provided be lawful, truthful, accurate and complete.
China realised paperless securities for listed companies at a fairly early stage. The
SD&C provides sound back-office support for the transfer of shares and follows universal
rules, such as the delivery versus payment principle and the principle of mutual
counterparties to ensure safety in conveying or transferring shares.
2.2.1.2 Principle II. A (2): Conveying or transferring shares
2.2.1.2.1 Freedom to convey or transfer shares
Article 138 of the Company Law provides that shareholders can transfer shares in
accordance with the law. Article 39 of the Securities Law provides that shares that have
been lawfully approved for trading shall be traded on Chinese stock exchanges or other
stock exchanges approved by the State Council. Article 102 of the Securities Law
provides that the State Council shall determine the establishment and dissolution of a
stock exchange. The stock exchange provides a venue and facilities where securities are
collectively traded and organises and supervises securities trading. According to Articles
111 to 113: investors sign agreements with securities companies, entrusting them with
buying and selling securities for them. Entrusted by investors, securities companies will
file trading declarations based on the rules of security trading, participate in collective
trading and undertake clearing and delivery responsibilities according to transaction
results. The securities registration and clearing institutions conduct stock clearing and
delivery of securities and capital funds with securities companies in accordance with the
rules of clearing and delivery, handle the procedures of security registration and transfer
ownership for the clients of securities companies. Stock exchanges provide guarantees for
the organisation of fair collective trading.
For a shareholder of a listed company, shares may be transferred directly through
stock exchanges’ automatic bidding system within trading hours and according to stock
exchange trading rules. The securities registration and clearing company will, on the day
after the transaction, transfer shares to the counterparty and cash to the seller. In addition
to the automatic bidding system, for large-volume transactions, the two sides may choose
to use the block-trading system, a transfer procedure, which is similar to that of the
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automatic bidding system. In addition, shareholders may also convey or transfer shares by
agreement between them.
Article 29 of the Measures for the Administration of Securities Registration and
Clearing provides that for securities listed and traded on stock exchanges, the securities
registration and clearing institution shall update the registration of the list of security
owners according to share transfers. For securities transferred through mutual agreement,
succession, donation, compulsory enforcement or administrative allocation, the securities
registration and clearing company shall adjust the balances of the relevant securities
accounts and change the registration of the list of securities owners.
2.2.1.2.2 Restrictions to transfer by certain shareholders
Article 142 of the Company Law restricts the transfer of shares by some shareholders.
Shares of a company held by its founder may not be transferred for a period of one year
starting from the date of the company’s establishment. Shares that have been issued
before the public offerings shall not be transferred for a period of one year starting from
the date of trading of the company’s shares on a stock exchange.
Each year the shares transferred within the term of office of the directors, supervisors
and executives of the company shall not exceed 25% of the total shares of the company
held by them. Their shares of the company shall not be transferred for a period of one
year starting from the date of trading of the company’s shares on a stock exchange. If
these people leave the company, they shall not transfer the shares of the company held by
them for a period of six months from the date of their departure. The articles of
association may otherwise provide for restrictions on the transfer of the company shares
held by its directors, supervisors and executives that are more restrictive than the
Company Law.
2.2.1.3 Principle II. A (3): Obtaining relevant and material information on the
corporation on a timely and regular basis
Article 97 of the Company Law provides that a joint-stock limited company shall
maintain its articles of association, the record of shareholders, the corporate bond
counterfoils, the minutes of general shareholders’, board of directors’ and board of
supervisors meetings, and its financial and accounting reports on the company’s premises.
Article 98 provides that a shareholder is entitled to inspect the articles of association, the
record of shareholders, the corporate bond counterfoils, the minutes of general
shareholders’ meetings, the minutes of board of directors’ and board of supervisors’
meetings, and the financial and accounting reports of the company, and is entitled to
make a proposal or enquiry concerning the company’s operations. Article 146 provides
that a listed company shall make public its financial conditions, operating conditions and
major legal actions in accordance with the relevant laws and administrative regulations
and shall make public its financial and accounting reports half-yearly in each fiscal year.
Article 166 provides that the financial and accounting reports of a joint-stock limited
company shall be available at the company’s premises for shareholders’ inspection as
from the twentieth day prior to the annual general shareholders’ meeting and that a joint-
stock limited company established through a public offering shall make public its
financial and accounting reports. In addition, the Securities Law requires listed companies
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32 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
and companies whose bonds are traded on the market to disclose more information to
investors. The Securities Law provides three types of disclosure obligations, annual
reports, half-yearly reports and ad-hoc reports. The Administrative Measures for the
Information Disclosure of Listed Companies promulgated by the CSRC and the Listing
Rules of stock exchanges also contain relevant regulation. Details in this regard are
provided in Chapter Four – Information Disclosure.
2.2.1.4 Principle II. A (4): Participating and voting in general shareholders’
meetings
The Company Law has no restriction on shareholders’ participation in general
shareholders’ meetings. According to the Company Law, when a shareholder attends a
general shareholders’ meeting, each share he or she holds is entitled to one vote. Shares
held by the company itself do not have voting rights. At present, joint-stock limited
companies in China only issue common shares.
Chinese companies that are listed both on the Chinese mainland and overseas may
issue both domestic currency denominated shares on the mainland and foreign currency
denominated shares overseas. According to Article 85 of the Articles of Association of
Companies Seeking a Listing outside the PRC Prerequisite Clauses, if required by the
rules of the stock exchange where the company is listed, the Articles of Association of the
company shall contain clauses, such as “shareholders of domestic investment shares and
those of foreign investment shares listed outside of the PRC are regarded as shareholders
of different categories”. These shareholders will participate in the voting of general
shareholders’ meetings according to their categories.
Article 8 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies in China
promulgated by the CSRC in 2002 provides that “besides ensuring that general
shareholders’ meetings proceed legally and effectively, a listed company shall make
every effort, including making full use of modern information technology, to increase the
number of shareholders attending the shareholders’ meetings. The time and location of
the shareholders’ meetings shall facilitate shareholder participation”.
The CSRC started to promote the network voting system in 2004. Now the network
voting system is actively implemented at general shareholders’ meetings on matters
related to material rights and shareholders’ interests.
2.2.1.5 Principle II. A (5): Electing and removing members of the board
According to Article 100 of the Company Law, the general shareholders’ meeting
shall exercise the authority to elect and replace members of the board of directors.
Shareholders may exercise their right to elect or remove members of the board through
participation in general shareholders’ meetings.
Furthermore, according to the relevant provisions of the Company Law, shareholders
holding over 3% of shares (individually or collectively) have the right to propose
candidates for the board of directors.
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2.2.1.6 Principle II. A (6): Sharing in the profits of the corporation
Article 4 of the Company Law provides that the shareholders of a company are
entitled to assets’ benefits. Accordingly, shareholders may participate in the distribution
of profits of the company in proportion to their respective shares. The Company Law
establishes the “same rights for same shares” principle, according to which each
shareholder is entitled to dividends on the basis of his or her proportion of ownership.
Shareholders who believe that their rights to share in the profits of the company have
been infringed upon by a director or company executive may file a lawsuit according to
Article 153 of the Company Law.
The CSRC’s Provisions on Strengthening the Protection of the Rights and Interests of
the General Public Shareholders (2004) make it clear that listed companies should
implement proactive profit distribution. Guidance for the Articles of Association of
Listed Companies (2006) provides that shareholders of listed companies obtain dividends
and other forms of interest distribution according to the proportion of shares they hold. In
order to guide and standardise dividend distribution by listed companies, CSRC published
Decisions on Amending Certain Provisions on Cash Dividends by Listed Companies,
requiring that listed companies state their cash dividends policy explicitly in the articles
of association and that the profit distribution policy should maintain continuity and
stability.
2.2.2 Principle II. B: Shareholders should have the right to participate in, and
to be sufficiently informed of, decisions concerning fundamental corporate
changes.
According to the Company Law, shareholders shall exercise the right to vote on the
following matters:
2.2.2.1 Principle II. B (1): Amendments to the articles of association
By law, only the general shareholders’ meeting has the authorisation to amend a
company’s articles of association. According to Article 104 of the Company Law, a
resolution containing changes to the articles of association has to be adopted by the
general shareholders’ meeting with a two-thirds majority.
2.2.2.2 Principle II. B (2): Authorisation of changes in capital
By law, only the general shareholders’ meeting has the authorisation to increase or
reduce registered capital. Such a resolution has to be adopted by an absolute majority of
voting rights in favour, accounting for two-thirds or more of the voting rights represented
by the shareholders attending the General Shareholders’ Meeting. In practice, the board
of directors usually proposes a change and provides the information to shareholders in
advance before the meeting is convened. Article 41 of the Measures for the
Administration of the Issuance of Securities by Listed Companies gives detailed
provisions on the scope of approval by the general shareholders’ meeting regarding the
issuance of shares by listed companies.
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34 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
2.2.2.3 Principle II. B (3): Major transactions
According to Article 122 of the Company Law, any purchase or sale of major assets
within one year or provision of a security in excess of 30% of the total assets by a listed
company shall be deliberated and determined at a general shareholders’ meeting and the
resolution should be adopted by an absolute majority of voting rights in favour,
accounting for two-thirds or more of the voting rights represented by shareholders’
attending the meeting. In practice, the board of directors announces the relevant
information to the shareholders in advance before a general shareholder’ meeting is
convened.
2.2.2.4 Principle II. B (4): Mergers, divisions, dissolution and changes to
corporate form
The adoption of resolutions on these matters also requires affirmative votes by
shareholders representing two-thirds of the voting rights at the general shareholders’
meeting.
2.2.3 Principle II. C: Shareholders should have the opportunity to participate
effectively and vote in general shareholders’ meetings and should be informed
of the rules, including voting procedures, which govern these meetings.
2.2.3.1 Principle II. C (1): Shareholders’ right to receive information concerning
the date, location and agenda of general meetings.
Article 103 of the Company Law provides that in order to hold a general meeting of
shareholders, notice concerning the time, venue and matters to be considered at the
meeting shall be given to each shareholder 20 days in advance. In the event of an interim
meeting of shareholders, the notice may be given 15 days in advance.
The Guidance for the Articles of Association of Listed Companies amended by the
CSRC in 2006 further improves the procedures for convening general shareholders’
meetings in that companies may, according to their actual circumstances, decide whether
to include in their articles of association a procedure for a public summons. Article 55 of
the Guidance provides that the notice shall include the date, location and length of the
general shareholders’ meeting as well as matters and proposals submitted to the meeting
for deliberation. Furthermore, the annotation of Article 55 specially requires that the
notice and supplementary notice about a general shareholders’ meeting shall give full and
complete information about all detailed contents of all proposals and items. Article 56
provides that if the election of directors or supervisors is to be discussed at the general
shareholders’ meeting, full and detailed information about the candidates shall be
disclosed in the notice, at minimum including personal information such as educational
background, work experience and concurrent jobs, whether the candidate has any related-
party relations with the company, its controlling shareholder or actual controller, the
person’s holding of company’s shares and whether the person has been penalized by the
CSRC or other competent departments or disciplined by a stock exchange. Article 57
provides that after the announcement is issued a general shareholders’ meeting should not
be delayed or cancelled without legitimate reason and items listed in the notice shall not
be cancelled. If the meeting has to be delayed or called off, the convener shall make the
2. SHAREHOLDERS’ RIGHTS
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relevant public announcement and explain the reasons at least two working days before
the original date of the meeting.
The Listing Rules of Shenzhen and Shanghai Stock Exchanges also require listed
companies to make available on designated websites other information necessary for
shareholders to make reasonable judgement on matters to be discussed.
In practice, listed companies in China usually announce specific information such as
the date, location and issues to be reviewed of the general shareholder meeting in the
media, including on the internet.
2.2.3.2 Principle II. C (2): Shareholders’ right to propose resolutions and ask
questions
2.2.3.2.1 Right to propose resolutions. According to Article 103 of the Company
Law, shareholders holding 3% of the shares of the company individually or jointly
may, ten days prior to the general meeting of shareholders, submit an
extraordinary written proposal to the board of directors. The board of directors
shall, within two days of receipt of the proposal, inform other shareholders and
submit the proposal to the general meeting of shareholders for deliberation.
According to Article 22 of the Company Law if the board of directors of a
company violates the above, shareholders may file a lawsuit in court for
revocation of the resolutions of the relevant meeting.
2.2.3.2.2 Enquiry right. Article 98 of the Company Law provides that a
shareholder is entitled to make a proposal or enquiry concerning the way the
company operates. Paragraph 1 of Article 151 further provides that when the
general shareholders’ meeting requires a director, supervisor or executive to be
present, they shall be present and answer the enquiries of shareholders. Article 29
of the Rules for the General Meetings of Shareholders of Listed Companies,
promulgated by the CSRC in 2006, provides that the directors, supervisors and
senior managers shall provide explanations and responses to the enquiries of
shareholders at the meetings.
2.2.3.3 Principle II. C (3): Shareholders’ right to participate in corporate
governance
According to the Company Law, at the general shareholders’ meeting, shareholders
are entitled to elect directors and supervisors, decide their remuneration, put forward
proposals, vote on their proposals, put enquiries to the board of directors and executives,
appoint and remove external auditors, and amend the articles of association.
Furthermore, according to Article 37 of the Measures Governing Equity Incentive
Plans of Listed Companies (Trial), promulgated by CSRC in 2005, general shareholders’
meetings shall vote on the equity incentive plans of the company and the plan shall be
adopted with two-thirds of the voting rights represented by shareholders attending the
meeting.
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36 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
2.2.3.4 Principle II. C (4): Shareholders should be able to vote in person or in
absentia, and equal effect should be given to votes whether cast in person or in
absentia.
According to Article 107 of the Company Law, a shareholder may attend a general
meeting of shareholders by proxy. The proxy holder shall present the proxy statement
issued by the shareholder to the company, and shall exercise his or her voting rights to the
extent authorised by the proxy.
Article 9 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies provides that
shareholders can either be present at the shareholders’ meetings in person or appoint a
proxy to vote on their behalf, and both means of voting shall have the same legal effect.
Article 10 of the Code further provides that the board of directors, independent directors
and qualified shareholders of a listed company may solicit shareholders’ rights to vote in
a shareholders’ meeting. No payment shall be made to shareholders for such solicitation,
and adequate information shall be provided to the persons whose voting rights are being
solicited.
The CSRC introduced online voting in 2004. At present, active efforts are being made
to use online voting for any resolution at the general shareholders’ meeting that bears on
major rights and interests of shareholders. For further information, see
Principle III. A (5) of Chapter 3.
2.2.4 Principle II. D Capital structures and arrangements that enable certain
shareholders to obtain a degree of control disproportionate to their equity
ownership should be disclosed.
When a shareholder attends the general shareholders’ meeting, each share is entitled
to one vote. The principle of “one share, one vote” is followed in China.
2.2.5 Principle II. E Markets for corporate control should be allowed to
function in an efficient and transparent manner.
2.2.5.1 Principle II. E (1): The rules and procedures governing the acquisition of
corporate control in the capital markets, and extraordinary transactions such as
mergers and sales of substantial portions of corporate assets, should be clearly
articulated and disclosed so that investors understand their rights and recourse.
Transactions should occur at transparent prices and under fair conditions that
protect the rights of all shareholders according to their class.
2.2.5.1.1 Article 85 of the Securities Law provides that investors may purchase a
listed company by tender offer, agreement or other lawful means. Article 86 of the
same law provides that where an investor possesses independently or jointly with
other person(s) through agreement or other arrangements 5% of the stocks issued
by a listed company through trading on the stock exchange, they shall, within
three days, submit a written report to the securities regulatory body of the State
Council and the stock exchange, notify the listed company, and make a public
announcement. They are prohibited from buying or selling company’s stocks in
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the period prescribed above. When an investor already possesses individually or
jointly with other person(s) through agreement or other arrangement 5% of the
stock of a listed company, they shall submit a report or make a public
announcement in accordance with provisions of the preceding paragraph when the
stocks of that company within their relevant joint possession increase or reduce by
5% of the company’s total stocks. They are prohibited from buying or selling
stocks of that company during the submission of the report and within two days
after they make a public announcement. Article 88 further provides that when an
investor, through trading on the stock exchange, possesses individually or jointly
with other person(s) through agreement or other arrangement 30% of the stocks
issued by a listed company and plans to make more purchases, he or she shall
make a tender offer for all or part of the company’s shares to all shareholders as is
required by law. The offer to purchase part of the shares shall include an
agreement that when the amount of shares the shareholders commit to sell exceeds
the offered amount to be purchased, the purchaser will make the purchase
proportionately.
2.2.5.1.2 The Administrative Measures on Takeover of Listed Companies,
promulgated by the CSRC in May 2006, contain detailed procedures and
information disclosure requirements for tender offer. To facilitate the acquisition
of a listed company, the Measures also provide for exemptions. In cases
consistent with Articles 62 and 63 of the Measures, the acquiring party may apply
for an exemption on making a tender offer to the CSRC.
2.2.5.1.3 Article 38 of the Administration Measures for Significant Asset
Restructuring of Listed Companies provides that the shareholders or actual
controllers of the listed company and relevant institutions and persons
participating in the planning, negotiating and decision-making of significant asset
restructuring shall report the relevant information to the listed company on a
timely basis and accurately, and assist the listed company in making a disclosure
in a timely, accurate and comprehensive manner. When the listed company has
any knowledge of price-sensitive information, it shall apply to the stock exchange
for trading suspension and disclose the information on a timely basis.
2.2.5.1.4 The Listing Rules of the stock exchanges have similar provisions on
information disclosure concerning the purchase and significant asset restructuring
of listed companies.
2.2.5.2 Principle II. E (2): Anti-takeover devices should not be used to shield
management and the board from accountability.
Article 8 of the Administration Measures on the Takeover of Listed Companies
provides that the directors, supervisors and senior managers of an acquired company shall
fulfil the loyalty and diligence obligations and treat all acquirers fairly. The decisions and
measures of the acquired company’s directorate shall be conducive to maintaining the
interests of the company and shareholders. The directorate shall not abuse its authority by
setting unnecessary barriers to the acquisition, use the company’s resources to provide
2. SHAREHOLDERS’ RIGHTS
38 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
financial aid in any form to the acquirers, or damage the lawful rights and interests of the
company and its shareholders.
2.2.6 Principle II. F: The exercise of ownership rights by all shareholders,
including institutional investors, should be facilitated. Institutional investors
acting in a fiduciary capacity should disclose their overall corporate governance
and voting policies with respect to their investments, including the procedures
that they have put in place for deciding on the use of their voting rights.
Institutional investors acting in a fiduciary capacity should disclose how they
manage material conflicts of interest that may affect the exercise of key
ownership rights regarding their investments.
2.2.6.1 Types of institutional investors in China
Institutional investors in China mainly include securities investment funds, social
security funds (administered by the National Council for the Social Security Fund),
qualified foreign institutional investors, securities firms and insurance companies.
According to statistics from the WIND database, up to 31 December 2009, the market
value of A shares held by institutional investors accounted for 46.29% of the total market
value of free-floated A shares.
2.2.6.2 Ways for institutional investors to exercise their shareholders’ rights
Article 11 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies in China,
promulgated by the CSRC in 2002, provides that institutional investors shall play a role in
the appointment of company directors, the compensation and supervision of management
and major decision-making processes. At present, securities investment funds in China
have been proactive in participating in the governance of listed companies, either directly
or indirectly.
2.2.6.2.1 Indirect participation. Institutional investors, as important investors of
the company, provide recommendations on decisions regarding company
management, issue opinions on major corporate decisions and exercise their
influence on the board of directors. Generally, after finding a target company, it is
necessary for institutional investors to have effective communication and
exchanges with the company management. Before further action is taken,
institutional investors tend to solicit support from other major shareholders to
convey a message of reform to the management, who is required to reform to
increase the value of the company. If the company management pays no heed to
such reform plans, a dispute over whether the management should be changed will
be difficult to avoid.
2.2.6.2.2 Direct participation. Institutional investors, as major investors of the
company, participate in the operation and management of the company through
the reorganisation of the board of directors, direct intervention in the company’s
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major decisions, participation in the operation and management and the exercise
of voting rights over proposals at the general shareholders’ meeting.
Qualified foreign institutional investors do not usually participate directly in voting at
the general shareholders’ meeting. When convened to a general shareholders’ meeting,
they often entrust the board of directors of the listed company to vote on their behalf by
delegating via the custodian bank.
2.2.7 Principle II. G: Shareholders, including institutional shareholders, should
be allowed to consult with each other on issues concerning their basic
shareholder rights as defined in the Principles, subject to exceptions to prevent
abuse.
2.2.7.1 The Company Law provides that the shareholders of a limited liability
company or a joint-stock limited company that individually or jointly hold 1% of
the total shares may request in writing that the board of supervisors or the
supervisors of a limited liability company without a board of supervisors file suit
before a people’s court. Shareholders holding 3% of the total shares may put
forward proposals, while and shareholders holding 10% of the total shares may
convene a general shareholders’ meeting.
2.2.7.2 Right to solicit voting rights. Article 10 of the Code of Corporate
Governance of Listed Companies in China provides that the board of directors,
independent directors and qualified shareholders of a listed company may solicit
the shareholders’ rights to vote in a shareholders meeting. No payments shall be
made to the shareholders for such solicitation, and adequate information shall be
provided to persons whose voting rights are being solicited.
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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011 41
Chapter 3
The equitable treatment of shareholders
3.1 Introduction to the equitable treatment of shareholders
There are two types of conflict of interest in corporate governance, one between
majority and minority shareholders and the other between management and shareholders.
These two types of conflicts of interest are manifested in different ways in different
ownership structures. Generally, when ownership is spread among many shareholders, the
conflict of interest between management and shareholders is more prominent. When the
ownership is relatively more concentrated, the conflict of interest between majority and
minority shareholders becomes comparatively more prominent. Although the level of
ownership concentration decreased after the 2005 non-tradable share reform of the capital
market, when Chinese listed companies are compared with those in the UK and the US,
they show fairly concentrated ownership structures. Consequently, dealing with conflicts
of interest between majority and minority shareholders is a core corporate governance
question in China, in order to ensure that shareholders are treated equitably.
There are three aspects to China’s institutional framework for the equitable treatment
of shareholders.
Firstly, the regime to ensure shareholders’ equitable participation in corporate
governance includes, but is not limited to: equal voting power, low-cost participation in
corporate governance by shareholders, inspection and enquiry rights, cumulative voting
rights and the right to make proposals.
Secondly, mechanisms to prohibit or regulate related-party transactions of majority
shareholders include withdrawing voting rights from shareholders in a related-party
guarantee, forbidding loans to related parties and the duty to compensate if damage is
caused in related-party transactions.
Thirdly, when the rights of medium and minority shareholders are infringed upon,
mechanisms to ensure effective compensation and remedies include their rights to request
the confirmation of the resolutions of general shareholder meetings’ and board meetings
as null and void and thereby revoke them. They may also request compensation for
damage done by controlling shareholders, compensation for damage done by directors or
executives of the company, and are entitled to file derivative suits when the company’s
interest is damaged by other person(s).
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42 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
3.2 China’s practices compared with OECD principles
3.2.1 Principle III. All shareholders of the same series of a class should be
treated equally
3.2.1.1 Principle III. A (1): Within any series of a class, all shares should carry
the same rights. All investors should be able to obtain information about the
rights attached to all series and classes of shares before they purchase. Any
changes in voting rights should be subject to approval by those classes of shares
that are negatively affected.
The Company Law only provides for common shares and does not include preferred
stock, deferred stock or golden shares. Hence in practice, there are no meetings for certain
classes of shareholders. Article 104 of the Company Law provides that each share a
shareholder holds is entitled to one vote.
However, for companies listed not only on the Chinese mainland but also in the US,
Hong Kong or elsewhere, shareholders may simultaneously hold A shares and H shares
or A shares and N shares. In this situation, these companies need to hold shareholders’
meetings for owners of different shares such as A, H or N for resolutions to be adopted
separately. According to Article 79 of the Articles of Association of Companies Seeking a
Listing outside the PRC Prerequisite Clauses, if the Company intends to change or
abrogate the rights of shareholders of different categories it may do so only after such
changes or abrogations have been approved by way of a special resolution of the general
shareholders’ meeting and by a separate shareholders’ meeting convened by the affected
shareholders of the relevant categories.
3.2.1.2 Principle III. A (2): Minority shareholders should be protected from
abusive actions by, or in the interest of, controlling shareholders acting either
directly or indirectly, and should have effective means of redress.
3.2.1.2.1 Right to convene general shareholders’ meetings
Exercising voting rights at general shareholders’ meetings is the key channel for
shareholders to exercise their rights. Therefore, when the rights and interests of minority
shareholders are abused, whether they are entitled to convene a general shareholders’
meeting and then exercise their voting rights at the meeting is a key indicator of the level
of systematic protection of minority shareholders’ rights. Article 102 of the Company
Law provides that where the board of directors or board of supervisors is unable or does
not fulfil its duty to convene a general shareholders’ meeting, shareholders individually or
jointly holding 10% of the company’s shares for 90 consecutive days or more may
convene and chair a general shareholders’ meeting.
3.2.1.2.2 Cumulative voting rights
According to Article 106 of the Company Law, the general shareholders’ meeting
shall adopt a cumulative voting system when voting on the election of directors or
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supervisors in accordance with the articles of association or the resolution adopted by the
general shareholders’ meeting.
Article 82 of the Guidance for the Articles of Association of Listed Companies and
Article 32 of Rules for the General Meetings of Shareholders of Listed Companies
provide that when the general shareholders’ meeting votes on the election of directors or
supervisors, the cumulative voting system may be implemented according to the
provisions of the articles of association of the company or the resolution of the general
shareholders’ meeting. Both documents require that companies make provisions in their
articles of association pertaining to the method and procedure of appointing directors and
supervisors and on cumulative voting rights. Certain Chinese listed companies have
already included the cumulative voting system in their articles of association.
3.2.1.2.3 Right to make proposals or motions and the right to proxy voting
Article 103 of the Company Law provides that shareholders individually or jointly
holding 3% of the shares of the company may, ten days prior to the general meeting of
shareholders, submit a temporary written proposal to the board of directors. The board of
directors shall, within two days of receiving the proposal, inform other shareholders and
submit the proposal to the general meeting of shareholders for deliberation. Article 107
provides that a shareholder may attend a general shareholders’ meeting by proxy, on
condition that the proxy holder present the proxy statement issued by the shareholder to
the company, and exercise the voting rights to the extent authorised by the proxy.
3.2.1.2.4 Voting rights on major matters
According to Articles 104 and 122 of the Company Law, a resolution adopted by the
general meeting of shareholders requires affirmative votes by a majority of the
shareholders attending the meeting. The resolution with regard to an amendment to the
articles of association, an increase or reduction of registered capital, a merger, division or
dissolution of the company or change in the form of the company as well as any purchase
or sale of major assets within one year or provision of a security in an amount in excess
of 30% of the total assets for a listed company, should be adopted by an absolute majority
of voting rights in favour accounting for at least two-thirds of the voting rights
represented.
3.2.1.2.5 Equitable treatment of shareholders during the acquisition of a listed
company
3.2.1.2.5.1 Mandatory tender offers. According to Articles 88 and 96 of the
Securities Law, when an investor, either through trading on the stock exchange or
by agreement, owns 30% of the stocks issued by a listed company and plans to
make more purchases, he or she shall make either a general or partial offer for a
further shareholding increase to the company’s stockholders as is required by law.
The provision protects minority shareholders from discriminative treatment in the
process. The Administrative Measures on Takeovers of Listed Companies stresses
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44 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
that if the acquirer makes a partial offer, the shares of shareholders who accept the
offer must be acquired proportionately.
3.2.1.2.5.2 Compulsory buy-outs. According to Article 97 of the Securities Law,
upon the expiration of a tender offer, where the share distribution of the target
company fails to fulfil the listing requirements, the listing of stocks of the said
listed company shall be terminated by the stock exchange according to law.
Shareholders who still hold the shares of the target company have the right to sell
their shares pursuant to equal terms as stipulated in the relevant tender offer. The
purchaser shall make the purchase.
3.2.1.2.6 Repurchase request rights of dissenting shareholders.
According to Article 143 of the Company Law, where shareholders of the company
oppose the decision to merge or divide the company made at a general shareholders’
meeting, they may request the company to purchase the shares they hold.
3.2.1.2.7 Shareholder voting avoidance system in security provision to related
party
According to Article 16 of the Company Law, the security provided by a company to
its shareholders or actual controller shall be determined by the shareholders meeting or
the company’s general shareholders’ meeting. Such shareholders or the shareholders
headed by the actual controller shall not participate in the voting process on the relevant
matters. The vote on such matters shall be adopted by more than half of all the other
shareholders attending the meeting.
3.2.1.2.8 System of law suits filed by shareholder representatives
According to Article 152 of the Company Law, when a director or executive is
involved in the situation as described in Article 150, the shareholders of a limited liability
company or a joint-stock limited company that individually or jointly hold 1% of the total
shares for 180 consecutive days may make a written request to the board of supervisors to
file suit before a People’s Court. Where a supervisor is involved in the circumstances
described in Article 150, aforesaid shareholders may also make a written request to the
board of directors to file suit before a People’s Court. Where the board of supervisors or
the board of directors refuses to file suit after receipt of the written request mentioned
above, or does not file suit within 30 days of receipt of the same, or comes across an
emergency where, if no immediate actions are taken, the company’s interests shall be
incurably impaired, then the shareholders may, in the interest of the company and on their
own behalf, directly file suit before a People’s Court. Where the company’s legal rights
and interests are violated by others and in the event of any losses incurred, the
shareholders defined above may file suit before a People’s Court in accordance with the
first two paragraphs of this Article.
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3.2.1.2.9 Rights to compensation.
Article 20 of the Company Law provides that the shareholders of a company shall
exercise their shareholders’ rights in compliance with laws, administrative rules and
regulations as well as the articles of association of the company. They shall not abuse
their shareholders’ rights or go against the interests of the company or other shareholders.
Where the abuse of shareholders’ rights causes any loss to the company or other
shareholders, the shareholder who caused abuse shall be liable for compensation in
accordance with the law. The law thereby establishes a fiduciary duty obligation for the
controlling shareholders or actual controllers towards minority shareholders to prevent
them from abusing their shareholders’ rights. Article 5 of the
Guidance for the Controlling Shareholder and de Facto Controller of Companies
Listed on SME Board issued by the Shenzhen Stock Exchange provides that the
controlling shareholder and de facto controller shall shoulder loyalty and diligence
obligations towards the listed company and minority shareholders. If their own interest is
in conflict with that of the listed company or the minority shareholders the interests of the
latter should be placed above their own.
3.2.1.3 Principle III. A (3): Votes should be cast by custodians or nominees in a
manner agreed upon with the owner of the shares.
According to Article 107 of the Company Law, a shareholder may attend a general
shareholders’ meeting by proxy. The proxy holder shall present the proxy statement
issued by the shareholder to the company, and shall exercise the voting rights to the
extent authorised by the proxy. Article 9 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed
Companies in China further provides that shareholders may either be present at the
general shareholders’ meetings in person or appoint a proxy to vote on their behalf. Both
means of voting have the same legal effect.
3.2.1.4 Principle III. A (4): Impediments to cross-border voting should be
eliminated.
Foreign shareholders of Chinese listed companies may directly participate in voting.
There is no legal restriction to prevent this.
3.2.1.5 Principle III. A (5): Processes and procedures for general shareholder
meetings should allow for equitable treatment of all shareholders. Company
procedures should not make it unduly difficult or expensive to cast votes.
3.2.1.5.1 Rights to be informed about notice of a general shareholders’ meeting
Notices of general shareholder meetings are all published in media available to the
public. Minority shareholders may receive notices of general shareholders’ meetings at a
low cost. Chinese law places do not require a shareholder to hold a particular number of
shares to be eligible to attend a general shareholder meeting.
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3.2.1.5.2 Right to make proposals
Article 103 of the Company Law provides that shareholders individually or jointly
holding 3% of the shares of the company may, ten days prior to the general shareholders’
meetings submit a written proposal to the board of directors.
3.2.1.5.3 Rights to online voting
In order to protect the legitimate rights and interest of public shareholders, in
December 2004 the CSRC promulgated the Regulations on Safeguarding Public
Investors’ Interests. This document requires listed companies to provide an online voting
platform for its shareholders when the general shareholders’ meeting discusses the
following matters:
(1) A public offering of new shares of the listed company (including overseas listed
foreign shares or other types of warrants with a nature of shares), a public offering of
corporate convertible bonds, and attribution of new shares to existing shareholders
(except where the shareholder holding de facto control undertakes to make full cash
subscriptions for the new shares before the general shareholders’ meeting is convened);
(2) A major asset restructuring in which assets are acquired at a premium of more
than 20% of the audited net assets value;
(3) Repayment of debt owed by a shareholder in the form of equity reduction;
(4) Overseas listing of subsidiaries that are significant to the parent company.
According to the relevant provisions of the Guidance for the Articles of Association of
Listed Companies in China, all listed companies in China have included in their articles
of association clauses pertaining to providing facility for shareholders to attend general
shareholders’ meetings via the internet. In 2004, both stock exchanges issued Detailed
Rules on the Implementation of Online Voting at General Shareholder Meetings of Listed
Companies, providing detailed rules for public shareholders to vote online.
3.2.2 Principle III. B: Insider trading and abusive self-dealing should be
prohibited.
3.2.2.1 Principle III. B (1): Prohibition of insider trading
By the end of the first half of 2010, the CSRC had investigated and taken action
against 59 cases of insider trading. However, to date, there have been no civil suits
involving insider trading.
3.2.2.1.1 The Securities Law makes the “prohibition of insider trading” a basic
principle (Articles 5 and 73). Article 76 of this law clearly provides that any
insider who has access to insider information or has unlawfully obtained any
insider information on securities being traded may not purchase or sell the
securities of the relevant company, or divulge such information, or advise any
other person to purchase or sell such securities. Where any insider trading incurs
any loss to investors, the person responsible shall be subject to the liabilities of
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compensation according to law. To define insider trading, the Securities Law also
gives detailed provision on the scope of insiders and insider information (Articles
74 and 75).
3.2.2.1.2 Criminal liabilities of insider trading. According to Article 180 of the
Criminal Law of the People’s Republic of China, any insider who possesses inside
information about any stock exchange transactions or anyone who illegally
obtains such information, prior to the publication of the information that concerns
stock issuing or trading or that has a vital bearing on the stock price, buys or sells
the very stock or divulges the very information shall be subject to criminal
detention and/or confiscation of any illegal gains. If the circumstances are serious,
they may be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of no more than five years.
3.2.2.1.3 Administrative liability. According to Article 202 of the Securities Law,
if an insider who has access to insider information of securities trading, or any
person who has obtained insider information purchases or sells the securities,
divulges the relevant information or advises any other person to purchase or sell
the securities before disclosure of the information regarding the issuance or
trading of securities or any other information that may have any significant impact
on the price of the securities, he or she shall be ordered to dispose the securities as
illegally held thereby according to law. The illegal proceeds shall be confiscated
and a fine of 1 to 5 times the illegal proceeds shall be imposed. Where there are
no illegal proceeds or the illegal proceeds are less than CNY 30 000 (EUR 3 255),
a fine of CNY 30 000 (EUR 3 255) up to CNY 600 000 (EUR 65 100) shall be
imposed. If an entity is involved in any insider trading, the person in charge and
any other person directly responsible shall be given a warning and imposed a fine
of CNY 30 000 (EUR 3 255), up to CNY 300 000 (EUR 32 550).
Any official from a securities regulatory body that conducts any insider trading shall
be given a heavier punishment.
3.2.2.2 Principle III. B (2): Regulation of related-party transactions
3.2.2.2.1 Shareholder voting avoidance system. Article 16 of the Company Law
provides that where the company provides guarantees to its shareholders or actual
controller, the shareholders or shareholders controlled by the actual controller
shall not vote on the matter.
3.2.2.2.2 Prohibition of lending to related parties. Article 116 of the Company
Law provides that a joint-stock limited company must not lend money to its
directors, supervisors or executives either directly, or through its affiliate
companies.
3.2.2.2.3 Decisions and disclosure of remuneration to the directors, supervisors
and executives. According to Article 100 of the Company Law, the remuneration
of the directors, supervisors and executives of shareholding companies shall be
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48 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
determined by general shareholders’ meetings. Article 117 of the law further
provides that a joint-stock limited company shall disclose the remuneration of its
directors, supervisors and executives on a regular basis.
3.2.2.2.4 Director voting avoidance system. According to Article 125 of the Company
Law, the director of a listed company related to the enterprise involved in the matters
discussed by the board of directors shall not exercise his or her own voting rights, or
represent other directors to exercise voting rights on such matters. The meeting of the
board of directors may be held when more than half of the unrelated directors are present.
The resolution made by the board shall be adopted by more than half of all such directors.
Where there are not more than three unrelated directors, the relevant matters shall be
forwarded to the general meeting of shareholders for deliberation.
3.2.2.2.5 General prohibition of related-party transactions by directors and executives.
Article 149 of the Company Law provides that the director and executive may not execute
any contract or engage in any transaction with the company in violation of the articles of
association or without the approval of the general shareholders’ meeting.
3.2.2.2.6 Damage compensation liability. Article 21 of the Company Law provides
that the controlling shareholders, actual controllers, directors, supervisors or
executives of a company shall not take advantage of their affiliations with others
in an attempt to harm the company’s interests and where any losses are incurred in
related violation, shall be liable for compensation.
3.2.2.2.7 Criminal liability. The Amendment 6 to the Criminal Law adopted in
2006 provides that where any director, supervisor or senior manager of any listed
company goes against his or her fiduciary duty to the company and takes
advantage of his or her position to manipulate the company in unfair, inequitable
related-party transactions to transfer assets of the listed company resulting in it
suffering serious loss, he or she shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of
no more than three years, or detention, and/or shall be fined. If the listed company
suffers from extremely serious losses, the person shall be sentenced to fixed-term
imprisonment of no fewer than three years but no more than seven years, and shall
be fined.
3.2.3 Principle III. C: Members of the board and key executives should be
required to disclose to the board if they have a material interest in any
transaction or matter directly affecting the corporation, either directly,
indirectly or on behalf of third parties.
Article 21 of the Company Law provides that the controlling shareholders, actual
controllers, directors, supervisors or executives of a company shall not take advantage of
their affiliations with others in an attempt to harm the company’s interests and, where any
losses are incurred in related violation, the company shall be liable for compensation.
Article 149 of the Company Law contains a non-compete clause, prohibiting transactions
with the company in violation of the articles of association and other prohibitions. Article
48 of the Administrative Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed Companies
promulgated by the CSRC provides that the directors, supervisors, executives,
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shareholders with 5% or more of shares, and persons acting in concert with such
shareholders and de facto controllers of a listed company shall submit a list of the listed
company’s interested parties and an explanation of the interested-party relationships to
the board of directors of the listed company. The listed company shall perform review
procedures for interested-party transactions and strictly implement a system of vote
abstention in interested-party transactions. The parties involved in an interested-party
transaction must not circumvent the listed company’s interested-party transaction review
procedures and information disclosure obligations either by concealing the interested-
party relationship or by any other means.
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Chapter 4
Information disclosure
4.1 Introduction to information disclosure
Disclosing information is a legal obligation for listed companies. This does not only
directly influence transparency and pricing efficiency – the critical basis upon which
investors make investment decisions – on the securities market, but also serves as the
lawful foundation of its principles “openness, fairness and impartialness” and the core of
supervision over the market. In the course of capital market development and corporate
governance reform, all the Chinese legislative bodies and relevant government agencies,
regulatory institutions and self-regulatory organisations have attached great importance to
the development of corporate information disclosure, and actively promoted its
improvement in terms of quality and transparency. Some positive progress has been
achieved in the form of an Omni-directional and multi-tier information disclosure
regulatory framework. The laws that make up the bulk of this framework are
supplemented by regulatory documents, such as relevant administrative laws and
provisions, as well as ministerial rules and regulations. The regulations are consistent
with international practices regarding normative principles, operational specifications,
and disclosure methods and contents. Overall, information disclosure by listed companies
has improved year by year, with constant progress in terms of the accuracy, scope and
depth of disclosed information as well as its use by investors and intermediaries.
At the same time, Chinese accounting standards and auditing standards are of a high
quality and have met recognised international standards. The Chinese Accounting
Standards Board signed the joint declaration with the International Accounting Standards
Committee, indicating that Chinese accounting standards have achieved substantial
convergence with international financial reporting standards.
4.1.1 Basic principles of information disclosure
Information disclosure is not only a legal obligation for listed companies but also the
key channel for investors to keep track of them and for regulatory agencies to supervise
them. Listed companies must take responsibility for the veracity, accuracy and
completeness of the disclosed information. Article 63 of the Securities Law stipulates that
the information disclosed by issuers and listed companies in accordance with the law
must be authentic, accurate and complete, and may not contain false records, misleading
statements or major omissions. Listed companies shall observe the following principles in
disclosing information:
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52 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
1. Principle of authenticity. The information disclosed by listed companies must be
objective, consistent and standardised and may not contain false records.
2. Principle of accuracy. The information disclosed by listed companies must be
accurate and may not use vague expressions or misleading statements that cause
confusion.
3. Principle of completeness. Listed companies must make public the relevant
information in compliance with laws, regulations and rules of securities
regulatory institutions and stock exchanges and no major omissions are allowed.
4. Principle of timeliness. Listed companies must disclose relevant information
insofar as is possible without delay.
5. Principle of fairness. Listed companies must treat all their investors in the same
manner and must not disclose information to some certain investors only.
4.1.2 Basic contents of information disclosure
The Administrative Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed Companies
stipulate that if the occurrence of a significant event is likely to have a marked impact on
the trading prices of a company’s securities and derivatives, and the investors have yet to
be informed, the listed company shall make a timely disclosure to declare the cause, the
current status and the likely effect of the event. Thus, information disclosure shall not
only refer to the reports that shall be disclosed regularly in accordance with the law, but
also those transactions, which require timely disclosure by law.
4.1.2.1 Information disclosure relating to issuance
The Company Law, Securities Law, Administrative Measures on Information
Disclosure by Listed Companies and the Standards on the Contents and Formats for
Information Disclosure by Companies Offering Securities to the Public have made
provisions on information disclosure related to issuance, including the disclosure of
important documents such as prospectuses, statements of public security offerings by
listed companies, statements of public bond offerings by listed companies, plans for
private stock offerings and outcome reports, reports of major asset reorganisations by
listed companies and the listing particulars.
The main contents that should be disclosed are: basic information on the issuance and
the issuer, major risk factors, the main business of the issuer and the industrial
circumstances, horizontal competition and related-party transactions, the remuneration,
irregular income, etc. of directors, supervisors, senior management and core technology
personnel, corporate governance, financial and accounting conditions, discussions and
analysis of management and business development targets, the situation of funds obtained
through public or private offering and dividend policies.
4.1.2.2 Regular reports
The Company Law and Securities Law stipulate that listed companies shall disclose
regular reports on a timely basis. These include annual reports, half-yearly reports and
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quarterly reports. Administrative Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed
Companies and the Standards on the Contents and Formats for Information Disclosure
by Companies Offering Securities to the Public, the Rules of Contents and Formats for
Information Disclosures by Companies Offering Bonds to the Public, etc. contain detailed
stipulations on the contents and formats of regular reports.
4.1.2.2.1 Annual reports. Listed companies and companies whose bonds are
traded on stock exchanges shall submit annual reports to the CSRC and stock
exchanges, and announce them within four months after the end of every
accounting year. Annual reports shall disclose the basic information about the
company, key accounting data and financial indices, information on shareholders,
information on the appointment of directors, supervisors and executives, changes
to their shareholdings, their annual remuneration, operating conditions, major
events, the board of directors’ report, management discussions and analysis, the
financial accounting report and auditing report, etc.
4.1.2.2.2 Semi-annual reports. Listed companies and companies whose bonds are
traded on stock exchanges shall submit half-yearly reports to the CSRC and stock
exchanges. These reports should be announced within two months of the end of
every first-half of each accounting year. The half-yearly report shall disclose basic
information about the company, main accounting data and financial indices, and
any changes among the controlling shareholders and actual controlling parties of
the company, management discussions and analysis, major matters in litigation or
arbitration, and other significant events that occurred during the reporting period
and their effect on the company, the financial accounting reports, etc.
4.1.2.2.3 Quarterly reports. A quarterly report shall be compiled and disclosed
within one month of the end of every quarter. The time of publication of the first
quarterly report shall not be earlier than the time of publication of the annual
report for the preceding year. A quarterly report shall include basic information
about the company, main accounting data and financial indices, etc.
4.1.2.3 Ad-hoc reports
Unlike regular reports, ad hoc reports are one-off announcements. The Administrative
Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed Companies require that where the
occurrence of a significant event is likely to have a marked impact on the trading prices
of a company’s securities and derivatives, and the investors have yet to be informed, the
listed company shall make a disclosure to declare the cause, the current status and the
likely effect of the event on a timely basis. These events may be divided into transactions
and non-transactions, and transactions may be divided into general transactions and
related-party transactions.
4.1.2.3.1 Transactions. Transactions refer to the activity of transferring resources
or obligations between the listed company or its holding subsidiaries and trading
partners. These transactions are not usually directly connected to the company’s
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54 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN CHINA © OECD 2011
production or operations and occur in a non-recurrent (or sporadic) manner. They
include: activities outside the company’s daily business operations, such as asset
purchases and divestments, external investments, providing financial aids and
guarantees, asset renting and leasing, management contracts, donations, debt
restructuring and the transfer of R&D projects. Detailed standards for accounting
transactions that require disclosure are clearly stipulated in the Administrative
Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed Companies and the Measures for
the Administration of Material Asset Reorganisations by Listed Companies, the
Listing Rules made by the stock exchanges. The information disclosed includes
the announcement of transactions, relevant agreements and contracts. If there are
related board decisions, government approvals, financial reports of the
transaction, appraisal reports, auditing reports, legal opinion papers or financial
consultation reports issued by intermediaries, they should also be disclosed.
4.1.2.3.2 Related-party transactions. Related-party transactions refer to the transfer
of resources or obligations to and from the listed company, its subsidiaries and
related-party entities. The Securities Law and Administrative Measures on
Information Disclosure by Listed Companies, etc. prescribed requirements for
undertaking related-party transactions. A related-party transaction shall disclose the
voting results of the board of directors, the time at which an agreement is signed,
the time and place of the transaction, the relationship between all the related parties,
the subject of the transaction, pricing policies, main contents of the contract, the
purpose of the transaction, its implications for the listed company and conditions
enabling the transaction to come into effect, etc. More specifically, it should include
the opinions of independent directors, reports by relevant intermediaries, the
situation concerning to the withdrawal of related directors from board voting,
special explanations by the board on whether this related-party transaction is
beneficial for the listed company, board of directors’ decisions, the agreement on
the related-party transaction, records of disagreement or reservations on the part of
directors who do not wish to speak at the board meeting.
4.1.2.3.3 Announcement of non-transactions. Non-transactions mainly include
information on shareholders, the board of directors, the board of supervisors, the
announcement of decisions taken at the shareholders’ meeting, the distribution of
dividends, converting the reserved funds into increased capital, changes to issued
funds, significant matters on litigations and arbitrations, business result forecasts,
etc. The scope of significant events is stipulated in the Securities Law,
Administrative Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed Companies, Listing
Rules, etc.
4.1.2.3.4 Information disclosure on acquisition.
In accordance with the Administration Measures on the Takeover of Listed
Companies, if shares held by an investor represent 5% of a listed company’s issued
shares, the investor shall make a report on the alteration to share entitlement within three
days after the fact, submit a written report to the supervisory bodies, notify the listed
company and make a public announcement. Investors may not buy or increase the stocks
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of the aforementioned listed company again before making the public announcement.
Once shares held by an investor reach 5% of a listed company’s issued shares, or if the
shares in question increase or decrease by 5% in securities transactions on the stock
exchange, the investor shall provide a report and make an announcement within three
days after the fact, and shall not buy shares within five days and may not increase shares
before making a public announcement. When a purchaser holds 30% of shares, and
continues to increase the stake, a general or partial tender offer is required, unless
exemption is obtained from the CSRC.
In addition to the above conditions, the Shenzhen and Shanghai Stock Exchanges
have both issued documents entitled Guidance on Internal Control of Listed Companies,
with a chapter dedicated to information disclosure regarding internal control. The chapter
provides that a listed company should report to its board of directors on a timely basis
when it finds major flaws or risks in internal control during its inspection or supervision
process. The matter should be reported to the relevant stock exchange by the board of
directors on a timely basis. Upon confirmation by the stock exchange, the board of
directors should issue a public notice, in which the relevant flaw in internal control, its
consequence, accountability and proposed remedies should be described.
4.1.3 The Construction of Extensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL)
Stock exchanges have been receiving annual reports submitted by listed companies
through XBRL since December 2008. The Shanghai Stock Exchange can even receive
half-yearly reports and quarterly reports through XBRL. At the Shenzhen Stock
Exchange, the XBRL service platform has the function to search and display information
and customers can download the XBRL documents with regular reports of all listed
companies.
4.2 China’s practices compared with OECD principles
4.2.1 Principle V. A Disclosure should include, but not be limited to information
on: 1. companies’ financial and operating results; 2. company objectives;
3. major share ownership and voting rights; 4. remuneration policy for
members of the board and key executives, and information on directors,
including their qualifications, the selection process, other company
directorships and whether they are regarded as independent by the board;
5. related-party transactions; 6. foreseeable risk factors; 7. issues regarding
employees and other stakeholders; 8. governance structures and policies, in
particular, the content of any corporate governance code or policy and the
process by which it is implemented.
4.2.1.1 Principle V. A (1): Financial and operating results of the company
4.2.1.1.1 Regularly published financial reports
Article 165 of the Company Law stipulates that a company shall prepare its financial
reports and accounts after the end of each financial year, and they shall be audited by an
accounting firm in accordance with the law.
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When disclosing annual financial reports, Chinese listed companies are required to
observe the General Regulations on Financial Reports issued by the CSRC. Chinese law
stipulates that annual reports shall be audited by accounting firms qualified to carry out
audit securities and futures activities, and the auditing reports shall be stamped by the
aforesaid firms and (?) stamped or signed by two or more of their registered accountants.
The annual reports of the company compiling and consolidating financial statements,
consolidated companies and special purpose entities (SPEs), as well as those of affiliated
companies and joint ventures, which have enormous influences upon a company’s annual
reports, shall be audited by the accounting firm qualified to audit the items pertaining to
securities and futures activities. Financial statements disclosed shall include the balance
sheet, profit statement, cash flow statement, and statement of any changes in equity. The
company that compiles consolidated financial statements shall also provide the financial
statements of its parent company separately. The listed company shall compile and
publish notes to financial statements. The principle of priority shall be applied in
compiling and disclosing those notes. Notes to financial statements shall provide clear,
accurate and comprehensive explanations on transactions and events mentioned therein.
In accordance with the Administrative Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed
Companies, besides publishing annual reports, half-yearly reports must be prepared and
disclosed within two months of the end of the first half of each fiscal year; and quarterly
reports shall be prepared and disclosed within one month of the end of each fiscal year’s
third and ninth months. The half-yearly reports and quarterly reports do not need to be
audited by external accountants, but they have to comply with the contents and formats
set by the CSRC.
4.2.1.1.2 Regular disclosure of management discussions and analyses
The Standards on Contents and Formats for Annual Reports and the Standards on
Contents and Formats for Half-yearly Reports stipulate that listed companies shall
discuss and analyse major events that occur in the reporting term in the Director’s Report
section to facilitate investors’ understanding of operating results and financial conditions.
These discussions and analyses shall not merely repeat the contents of financial reports,
but focus on major events and uncertainties, which may cause difficulties, and which are
difficult for financial reports to reflect. These may concern the company’s future
operating results and financial conditions and matters that influence them, but also
matters that have a significant effect on the reporting term, but not on the future.
4.2.1.2 Principle V. A (2): Company objectives
A company is an organisation set up to make a profit through business activities or for
other purposes. The Company Law stipulates that in seeking to make a profit, a company
shall also take into consideration the interests of its creditors, employees and the general
public, and assume its social responsibility.
Often, the objectives of a company are recorded in its Articles of Association. The
Guidance for the Articles of Association of Listed Companies stipulates that a listed
company shall explicitly define its business aims when developing its Articles of
Association.
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In addition to the Articles of Association, the Standards on the Contents and Formats
for Annual Reports stipulates that a listed company shall describe in the Director’s Report
section of its annual report its vision for the company’s future, including its strategy for
corporate development in the future, new business, new products to be developed, new
projects requiring investment, as well as the related plans for financing and funding.
Moreover, the company shall also disclose all possible risks, which may adversely
influence the corporate development strategy and the achievement of its business goals.
4.2.1.3. Principle V.A (3): Major ownership and voting rights
4.2.1.3.1 Information disclosure requirements for Initial Public Offerings (IPO)
In accordance with the Securities Law and relevant CSRC regulations, and before
making an IPO and going public, a company shall provide detailed information in its
prospectus on the founder, the major shareholders holding 5% or more of the shares, the
actual controllers, the controlling shareholders, and other enterprises controlled by the
controlling shareholders and actual controllers, and changes to stock ownership since the
establishment of the company. The Company Law defines an actual controller as anyone
who is not a shareholder but is able to hold actual control over a company’s acts by
means of investment relations, agreements or other methods. Opinion No.1 in The
Application of Securities and Futures Laws: the Interpretation and Application of “no
alteration of the actual controller” in Article 12 of the Measures for the Administration
of Initial Public Offering and Listing of Stocks, the control of a company refers to the
power to exert an influence on the resolutions of shareholders’ meetings or to control the
company as a result of direct or indirect equity investment in the company. In this
connection, in order to determine the control of a company, corresponding equity
investments should be reviewed and analysis should be made concerning the substantive
influence by the relevant persons on the decisions of shareholders’ and board meetings
and on the nomination and appointment of directors and senior executives according to
the specific situations. Any information disclosure concerning a company’s actual
controllers shall be extended to the persons, state-owned asset management bodies or
other organisations, or persons who have reached certain agreements or assented to
certain arrangements among the shareholders, including the situation where actual control
is realised by means of trust.
4.2.1.3.2 Information disclosure requirements for periodic reports
In line with relevant CSRC regulations, all listed companies shall disclose
information on the ownership and voting rights of its major shareholders in annual reports
and half-yearly reports. This information should include: the total number of shareholders
by the end of the reporting period, basic information and shareholding information for
shareholders holding 5% or more of the company’s stock, as well as changes in shares
within the reporting period. Any listed company, when disclosing its annual report, shall
disclose the information on the actual controllers and the property and control
relationships between the company and its actual controllers.
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4.2.1.3.3 Information disclosure requirements for major equity changes
All listed companies in China shall disclose information when certain thresholds of
ownership are passed. In accordance with the Administration Measures on the Takeover
of Listed Companies, a change-in-equity report should be compiled when the equity of an
investor and persons acting in concert with that investor reaches 5% or more of a listed
company’s total issued shares by trading on the stock exchanges, within three days after
the fact. Moreover, a written report shall be submitted to the CSRC and the stock
exchanges, and a copy filed to the CSRC branch(es) in the place where the listed
company’s headquarters are located. The listed company shall also be informed, and a
change-in-equity announcement made.
When the equity of an investor and persons acting in concert with that investor
reaches 5% of a listed company’s total issued shares, this must be reported and
announced in line with the preceding paragraph, when shareholdings are increased or
decreased by 5% through trading on the stock exchanges.
The said investor and persons in concert with that investor may not purchase or sell
company shares until the report and announcement are made.
4.2.1.4. Principle V.A (4): The remuneration policy for members of the board and
key executives, and information on directors, including their qualifications, the
selection process, other company directorships and whether they are regarded as
independent by the board.
4.2.1.4.1 Basic information on directors, supervisors and senior managers
The Standards on Contents and Formats for Annual Reports stipulate that any listed
company shall disclose certain information on its directors, supervisors and senior
managers, including:
• Their names, gender, age, term of office, shares held at the beginning and end of
the reporting year, stock options, amount of restricted shares conferred, changes
in shares within the reporting year and reasons for the changes.
• The directors, supervisors and senior managers shall meet the qualifications
provided by the Company Law and the Guidance for the Articles of Association of
the Listed Companies (see “Chapter V Responsibilities and Supervision of the
Board of Directors (V) Principle VI.E”).
• If a director is independent, this shall be indicated separately. For more
information about the independent director standards and system, please refer to
“Chapter V Responsibilities and Supervision of the Board of Directors (V)
Principle VI.E”.
• Major working experience over the past five years. If any director holds a position
in a shareholder’s company, his duties in the company and directorships in other
companies shall also be indicated.
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4.2.1.4.2 Qualifications and independence
Article 147 of the Company Law provides that a person in any of the following
categories may not serve as a director, supervisor, or senior executive of a company: (1) a
person without civil capacity or with limited civil capacity; (2) having been sentenced to
criminal punishment for crimes of embezzlement, bribery, conversion of property,
misappropriation of property, sabotage of socialist market economic order in the previous
five years, or having been deprived of political rights as a result of a criminal conviction
in the previous five years; (3) having served as a director, factory chief, or general
manager of a company or enterprise, which filed for bankruptcy or liquidation and being
personally responsible for such bankruptcy in the previous three years; (4) having served
as the legal representative of a company or enterprise whose business licence was
revoked due to violation of the law and being personally responsible for such revocation
in the previous three years; or (5) in default of personal debt of a significant amount. The
Guiding Opinion on the Establishment of the Independent Directors’ System by Listed
Companies (2001) provides qualifications for independent directors of listed companies.
The CSRC Notice on General Managers and Executives of Listed Companies May Not
Hold Concurrent Positions in the Organisations of Controlling Shareholders states
clearly that the general manager of a listed company must work full-time and may not
hold any post other than a director in the organisation of the controlling shareholder and
that general managers and executives (deputy general manager, chief financial officer and
secretary of the board of directors) must be remunerated by the listed company and may
not receive a salary from the controlling shareholder.
4.2.1.4.3 Remuneration of directors, supervisors and senior managers
The Company Law stipulates that a company shall disclose to its shareholders the
payment received by its directors, supervisors and senior managers.
The Standards on Contents and Formats for Annual Reports provide that the total
pre-tax remuneration (including basic pay, bonuses, allowances, subsidies, welfare
benefits, insurance premiums, accumulation funds, annuities and other forms of payment
by the company) received by the directors, supervisors and senior managers of a listed
company within the reporting period shall be disclosed. Moreover, stock options shall
also be indicated separately in line with the volume of outstanding shares, volume of
strike shares, the strike price and market price by the end of the reporting period.
Apart from remuneration information, all listed companies shall also disclose
information on the decision-making process concerning the remuneration of directors,
supervisors and senior managers, the basis on which remuneration is established, and the
actual payment of the remuneration.
The Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that the board of
directors of a listed company may establish a remuneration and appraisal committee in
accordance with the resolutions of the shareholders’ meetings. It shall be composed solely
of directors and chaired by an independent director, and independent directors shall
constitute the majority of the committee. The main duties of the remuneration and
appraisal committee are to study the appraisal standard for directors and management
personnel, to conduct an appraisal and make recommendations, and to study and review
the remuneration policies and schemes for directors and senior managers.
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Senior managers of a listed company may not receive payment from any other
company controlled by the controlling shareholders and actual controllers of the listed
company. In case the directors and supervisors do not receive any payment or subsidies
from the company, it must be explicitly indicated whether they receive any payment or
subsidies from the shareholders’ companies or any other associated organisations.
In accordance with the Administration Measures on Equity Incentives of Listed
Companies, a listed company’s equity incentive plan shall be approved by a vote of more
than two-thirds of the directors attending the shareholders’ meeting, and the resolution
and related documents shall be disclosed on a timely basis. A listed company shall
disclose the implementation of the equity incentive plan in its periodic report within the
reporting period, including: the scope of incentives within the reporting period; the
aggregate amount of rights and interests granted, exercised and invalidated within the
reporting period; all previous adjustments to the granted price and strike price within the
reporting period; exercise of incentive rights objects; equity changes due to the exercise
of incentive rights objects; and accounting methods dealing with equity incentives.
4.2.1.4.4 Election of directors, supervisors and senior managers
The Company Law stipulates that the non-employee directors and supervisors of a
joint-stock company shall be elected during the shareholders’ meeting; all employee
representatives who serve as a director or supervisor shall be elected by employees
through the employee representatives’ meeting. CSRC has laid down the requirements
and standards for the election and appointment process of directors and supervisors.
These stipulate that a listed company shall provide for the election and appointment
process of directors and supervisors in its Articles of Association. Detailed information
on candidate directors and supervisors shall be disclosed in advance before the
shareholders’ meeting is convened in order to ensure that the shareholders have sufficient
information about the candidates when voting. The resolution of the shareholders’
meeting on the election of directors and supervisors shall be announced in a timely
manner in the newspapers and on the websites designated by the stock exchanges.
The Company Law provides that the board of directors shall decide on the
employment of managers and their remuneration, as well as the employment of other
senior managerial personnel in line with nominations put forward by managers. Any
decision of the board of directors on the employment and appointment of managers and
other senior managerial personnel shall be announced in the newspapers and on the
websites designated by the stock exchanges on a timely basis.
The Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that the board of
directors may establish a nomination committee in accordance with the resolutions of the
shareholders’ meetings. It shall be composed solely of directors, chaired by an
independent director, and independent directors shall constitute the majority of the
committee. The main duties of the committee are to study standards and procedures for
the election of directors and make recommendations, to extensively seek qualified
candidates for directorship and management, and to review the candidates for directorship
and management and make recommendations.
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4.2.1.5 Principle V.A (5): Related-party transactions
4.2.1.5.1 Affirmation of related-party relationship
Related-party transactions are a key issue for the corporate governance and
supervision of China’s listed companies. The Company Law stipulates that the related-
party relationship refers to the relationship between company’s controlling shareholders,
actual controllers, directors, executives and the enterprises it controls directly or
indirectly, and other relationships which may influence the company’s current
shareholding structure. However, state-owned holding enterprises are not considered to
be in a related-party relationship merely because they are controlled by the state as well.
The affirmation of related-party relationships has been stipulated in the Listing Rules
of the stock exchanges in detail: the connected persons of the listed companies shall
include the connected legal personalities or entities and natural persons or individuals,
among which:
The connected legal personalities shall include: (1) the legal person directly or
indirectly who controls the listed company; (2) and the directly or indirectly controlled
legal person (excluding the listed company and its subsidiaries); (3) the legal person
directly or indirectly controlled by the connected natural person of the listed company or
taking the positions as directors and executives (excluding the legal person from the listed
company and its subsidiary); (4) the legal person holding more than 5% of the shares of
the listed company; (5) and other legal persons determined by the CSRC, stock exchanges
or listed companies in accordance with the principal of “substance overweighs forms”
having a special relationship with the listed company, which may result in the interests of
the listed company favouring them.
The connected individuals shall include: (1) the natural person who directly or
indirectly holds more than 5% of the shares of the listed company; (2) the directors,
supervisors or executives of the listed company; (3) the directors, supervisors or
executives of the connected legal persons; (4) the family members having a close
relationship with the persons mentioned in Item (1) and (2) of this Article, including the
spouse, parents, parents of the spouse, brothers and sisters and their spouses, the children
aged 18 years old or above and their spouses, brothers and sisters of the spouses, as well
as parents of their children’s spouses; (5) other natural persons determined by the CSRC,
stock exchanges or listed companies according to the principal of “substance outweighs
forms” having a special relationship with the listed company, which may result in the
interests of the listed company favouring them.
In addition, those who qualify as the above-mentioned connected legal persons and
natural persons within the next 12 months or previous 12 months shall also be considered
as connected persons.
The Accounting Standards for Enterprises No.36—Disclosure of Related Parties also
require the affirmation of the connected parties, when: a party controls, jointly controls or
exercises significant influence over another party, or when two or more parties are under
the control, joint control or significant influence of the same party, related-party
relationships are constituted. In accordance with accounting standards, the following
parties constitute related parties of an enterprise: (1) the parent company thereof; (2) the
subsidiaries thereof; (3) other enterprises under the control of the same parent company;
(4) investors having joint control over the enterprise; (5) the investors with significant
influence upon the enterprise; (6) joint ventures thereof; (7) the associated enterprises
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thereof; (8) the main individual investors and the close family members thereof. A main
individual investor refers to an individual investor who can control or jointly control an
enterprise, or has significant influence thereof; and (9) key managerial personnel refers to
those who have the power of and responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the
activities of the enterprise. The close family members of a main individual investor or of
a key managerial person refer to the family members who may influence or be influenced
by that individual in handling transactions with the enterprise; (10) other enterprises
significantly influence by the main individual investors, key managerial personnel, or
close family members of such individuals.
4.2.1.5.2 Affirmation of related-party transactions
As in the regulations in the Listing Rules of stock exchanges, the related-party
transactions of a listed company refer to matters concerning transferring resources or
obligations between the company/its subsidiary and the connected person(s), which
include purchasing or selling assets; investments (including consigned financing,
consignment loan, investment in subsidiary, etc.); providing financial aid; providing a
guarantee; renting or leasing assets; signing a management contract (including entrusted
operations, trustee operations, etc.); granting or donating assets; credit or debt
restructuring; transferring of R&D projects; purchasing raw materials, fuel and power;
sales of products and commodities; rendering or receiving labour services; trustee sales;
joint investment by both the connected parties; and other matters that may result in
transferring resources or obligations through the agreement.
The Administrative Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed Companies
stipulate that the term “related-party transaction” refers to an event in which a transfer of
resources, labour services or obligations takes place between related parties, irrespective
of whether money is charged. The types of related-party transaction usually include the
following: (1) purchases or sales of goods; (2) purchasing or selling assets other than
goods; (3) rendering or receiving labour services; (4) guaranteeing; (5) providing capital
(including loans or equity contributions); (6) leasing; (7) acting as an agency; (8) transfer
of research and development projects; (9) licence agreements; (10) settling debts on
behalf of an enterprise or by an enterprise that represents another party; and (11)
remuneration for key managerial personnel.
4.2.1.5.3 Disclosure of related-party transactions
A company shall satisfy the conditions of operational independence before an IPO,
i.e., the business of issuers shall be independent of the controlling shareholders, actual
controllers and other enterprises controlled by it, and shall not conduct horizontal
competition or unfair related-party transactions with the aforesaid parties. Issuers shall
fully disclose the relationship between the connected parties and appropriately disclose
the said transactions in accordance with the materiality principle. The related-party
transactions shall ensure fair prices and not allow for a situation in which profits are
manipulated through the transactions.
After the companies are listed, the Administrative Measures on Information
Disclosure by Listed Companies stipulates that directors, supervisors, executives,
shareholders with 5% or more of shares and persons acting in concert with such
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shareholders and de facto controllers of a listed company shall submit, on a timely basis,
a list of the listed company’s related parties and an explanation of the relationships to the
board of directors of the listed company. The listed company shall perform review
procedures for interested-party transactions and strictly enforce a system of vote
abstention in interested-party transactions. The parties to an interested-party transaction
must not circumvent the listed company’s interested-party transaction review procedures
and information disclosure obligations by concealing the interested-party relationship or
by any other means.
In accordance with the regulations of the Listing Rules stipulated by the stock
exchanges, the Report on Disclosure of Related Party Transactions by Listed Companies
shall be fixed with the official seal of, and issued by, the company’s board of directors. If
a listed company engages in a transaction with the related natural persons of more than
CNY 300 000 (EUR 32 550), and if a listed company engages in a transaction with the
related legal persons of more than CNY 3 million (EUR 325 500), which accounts for
more than 0.5% of the absolute value of the latest audited net assets of the company, it
shall disclose such matters promptly.
The Standards of Related-Party Transactions, which are required to be submitted to
the board of directors for review, shall be formulated in accordance with the company’s
articles of association. The Listing Rules stipulate that the said standards that need to be
examined by the general meeting of shareholders shall be formulated as follows: if a
listed company engages in a related-party transaction (unless the listed company is
accepting the donation of cash assets and providing the guaranty) with the related parties
of more than CNY 30 million, accounting for more than 5% of the absolute value of the
latest audited net assets of the listed company, it shall, apart from disclosing such matters
promptly, also arrange for an intermediary institution qualified to conduct securities and
futures businesses to conduct the audit and evaluation of the transaction target and submit
the transaction to the shareholders general meeting for deliberation. When the board of
directors or shareholders’ general meeting of the listed company examines the relevant
matters of related-party transactions, the connected directors or shareholders shall
withdraw from voting. The related-party transactions (according to the terms of the
above-mentioned standards) shall be partly disclosed in the financial statements of the
annual report.
The Accounting Standards for Enterprises No.36–Disclosure of Related Parties
stipulate that an enterprise shall, in its financial statements, disclose relevant information
on all related-party relationships and the transactions among them. If it offers
consolidated financial statements to outsiders, it is not required to disclose the
transactions among the enterprises that have been included in the consolidation, but it
shall disclose the related-party relationships and transactions beyond the scope of
consolidation.
If a listed company avoids information disclosure and reporting obligations by
concealing related-party relationship or taking other measures, it shall be punished by the
CSRC in accordance with Article 193 of the Securities Law.
4.2.1.6 Principle V.A (6): Risk factors
The Standards on Contents and Formats for Information Disclosure of Prospectus,
issued by the CSRC, require that companies applying for an IPO shall abide by the
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materiality principle in its prospectus, since disclosing according to priority may directly
or indirectly have a significant adverse impact upon issuers’ production and operation
status, financial situation and sustained profitability. The company shall disclose its risk
factors, which shall be described in a complete, accurate and specific manner based upon
its actual conditions. It shall conduct a quantitative analysis on the risk factors disclosed
and make a targeted qualitative description of those without access to quantitative
analysis.
The Standards on Contents and Formats for Annual Reports stipulate that a listed
company shall comply with the materiality principle in the Director’s Report section of
the Annual Report, disclose all the risk factors (including macro-policy risk, market and
business operation risk, financial risk, technical risk, etc.) that may exert an adverse
impact upon the realisation of its future development strategies and business objectives.
The company shall disclose risk factors in light of its own characteristics, and the
contents disclosed shall be complete, accurate and concrete. In addition, the company
may introduce, based upon its actual situation, the countermeasures and solutions adopted
or to be adopted with specific contents and operability.
In the process of the acquisition and major asset reorganisation of a listed company,
the acquirer or the listed company intending to conduct material asset reorganisation shall
disclose the influences and risks of such an acquisition or reorganisation to the listed
company, in accordance with the Standards on Contents and Formats for Acquisition
Reports of Listed Companies and the Standards on Contents and Formats of the
Application Documents for Material Asset Reorganisation by Listed Companies.
4.2.1.7 Principle V.A (7): Employees and stakeholders
A listed company shall disclose at length in its prospectus and annual reports its staff
situation, including the quantity, major composition (i.e. production staff, sales personnel,
technicians, financial staff, administrative staff) and the educational background of the in-
service employees, as well as the number of retired workers, the costs for whom shall be
borne by the company.
In order to promote sustainable socio-economic development and encourage listed
companies to actively assume their social liabilities, the Shanghai Stock Exchange and
Shenzhen Stock Exchange have drawn up the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed
Companies. The Code describes the listed companies’ social responsibilities for the
overall national and social development, natural environment and resources as well as
with regard to stakeholders, such as shareholders, creditors, employees, clients,
customers, suppliers, and communities. A listed company shall actively fulfil its social
responsibilities and regularly evaluate such fulfilment. It may also disclose its CSR
(corporate social responsibility) report.
4.2.1.8 Principle V.A (8): Corporate governance structure and decision-making
procedure
According to the relevant rules prescribed in the Company Law, the CSRC requests
that a listed company periodically disclose its governance status.
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Meeting the relevant corporate governance requirements is one of the pre-conditions
for a company to conduct an IPO and go public. The prospectus shall disclose in detail
the establishment, improvement and operation of the shareholders’ meeting, the board of
directors, the supervisory board, independent directors and the board of directors’
secretariat, and explain the duties and responsibilities of the abovementioned bodies and
personnel.
The Guidance for the Articles of Association of Listed Companies stipulates that a
listed company shall specify in its articles of association, the governance structure and
decision-making procedure of the shareholders’ meeting, the board of directors, the
supervisory board and senior managerial personnel. The Guidance has provided the
essential and compulsory requirements on the contents to be included in the articles of
association of a listed company.
As per the Annual Report Standards, a corporate governance report shall be included
in the annual report disclosed by a listed company on a regular basis. In accordance with
the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies, the company shall state, at the
beginning of the governance report, whether discrepancies exist between the actual
governance conditions and the requests of the Code, and explicit statements shall be made
in the case of discrepancies. Furthermore, the company shall also successively describe
the performance of independent directors’ duties within the reporting period, whether
there is a separation between the company and its controlling shareholders in terms of
business, personnel, assets, bodies, finance, etc., the establishment and improvement of
internal control systems with regard to production and operation, financial management,
information disclosure, the appraisal and incentive mechanism for senior managerial
personnel during the period, and the establishment and implementation of the award
/incentive system concerned.
4.2.2 Principle V.B Information should be prepared and disclosed in
accordance with high-quality standards of accounting, financial and non-
financial disclosure.
4.2.2.1 The new system of Accounting Standards for Business Enterprises tends to
converge with international standards
Relevant Chinese laws, regulations and department rules explicitly state that a listed
company shall prepare and disclose its financial statement in its prospectus, annual report
and list of particulars in accordance with unified accounting standards. At present, China
has high-quality accounting standards, which have been internationally recognised.
Article 8 of the Accounting Law states that China shall implement a uniform
accounting system drawn up and issued by the Ministry of Finance. On February 15,
2006, the new system of Accounting Standards for Business Enterprises enacted by
China’s Ministry of Finance, which came into force among listed companies on January
1, 2007, signified the formal establishment of China’s enterprise accounting standards
system and the CPA auditing system. The new system has drawn substantially from and
is hence similar to the International Financial Reporting Standards. As a comprehensive
accounting standards system, Standards are composed of a total of 39 items covering the
accounting changes of all types of economic transactions and affairs of various
enterprises. Many directors and technical experts from the China Accounting Standards
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Committee (CASC) and the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) have
conducted item-by-item comparisons, studies and in-depth discussions, and reached a
consensus on convergence. A joint statement has been signed between CASC and IASB,
indicating that China’s accounting standards have achieved substantial convergence with
international financial reporting standards.
4.2.2.2 Requirements of financial information disclosure
According to the new system of Accounting Standards for Business Enterprises, the
financial statement disclosed in the prospectus, the annual report and the particulars of the
listed company shall meet four requirements, to: (1) be comprehensive; (2) be
understandable to investors; (3) reflect the uniformity of accounting standards
application; (4) be comparable for all accounting periods.
4.2.2.2.1 Comprehensiveness
Essential information related to business finance may be guaranteed for disclosure in
accordance with the new accounting standards and the requirement of CSRC-related
information disclosure standards. The Accounting Standards for Business Enterprises –
Basic Standards stipulate that a financial statement is made up of a financial statement
and annotations. The statement includes: a balance sheet, profit statement, cash flow
statement and statement of changes in ownership equity, etc. The specific standards for
business enterprise accounting not only provide for the confirmation and measurement of
accounting items, but also specify disclosure-related requirements. The General
Provisions on Financial Reporting further stipulate that the financial statement disclosed
shall include a balance sheet and cash flow statement, as well as a statement of changes in
ownership equity. The Provisions also detail disclosure requirements of financial
statement annotations.
4.2.2.2.2 Understandable to investors
The new accounting standards require that financial statements facilitate investors’
comprehension and its application. Article 14 of the Accounting Standards for Business
Enterprises – Basic Standards stipulate that “The accounting information provided by
enterprises shall be clear for users to understand and apply”.
4.2.2.2.3 Reflecting the uniformity of accounting standards application
The application of new accounting standards must be consistent.
The Accounting Standards for Business Enterprises No.28 – Changes in Accounting
Policies and Estimates and Corrections of Errors specify that identical accounting policies
shall be adopted by enterprises to tackle the same or similar transactions or items. The
accounting policies adopted by enterprises shall be consistent for each accounting period
and any earlier and later stages without arbitrary changes. If any change is required,
relevant details shall be disclosed in accordance with the provisions of the standards, which
specify that the application of the accounting standards should be harmonised.
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4.2.2.2.4 Comparable for all accounting periods
The new accounting standards specify that accounting information should be
comparable from one accounting period to another.
Article 15 of the Accounting Standards for Business Enterprises – Basic Standards
stipulate that the accounting information provided by enterprises shall be comparable and
consistent, that accounting policies shall be adopted for identical or similar transactions or
items incurred in one company during different periods without arbitrary changes. Any
change, if required, shall be stated in the annotations. Accounting policies shall be
adopted for identical or similar transactions or items incurred in different enterprises to
ensure the uniformity and comparability of accounting information.
For the incurred changes in accounting policies and corrections of errors, as stipulated
by the Accounting Standards for Business Enterprises No.28—Changes in Accounting
Policies and Estimates and Corrections of Errors, a retrospective approach shall be
adopted to adjust preliminary comparable data and earlier restatements shall be adopted
to correct important preliminary errors and financial statements, if more reliable and
relevant accounting information is provided by the changes in accounting policies.
Listed companies that correct preliminary errors shall make announcements and
audits and disclose the corrected financial statements in accordance with the Correction
and Relevant Disclosure of Financial Information promulgated by the CSRC.
4.2.3 Principles V.C & V.D: An annual audit should be conducted by an
independent, competent and qualified auditor in order to provide an external
and objective assurance to the board and shareholders that the financial
statements represent the financial position and performance of the company
fairly in all material respects. External auditors should be accountable to the
shareholders and are duty-bound to the company to exercise due professional
care in conducting the audit.
4.2.3.1 New accounting standards and international convergence
The audited financial statement in the prospectus, annual report, and listing
particulars of the listed company shall be audited in accordance with comprehensive
auditing criteria. China’s auditing standards are of a high quality and have now reached
the standards that are accepted internationally.
In 2006, the Ministry of Finance promulgated a new 48-point auditing standards
system—China Auditing Standards for CPA. The system took effect in all domestic
accounting firms on January 1, 2007. These new auditing standards cover almost all items
of international auditing criteria, including the auditing objective and principle, evaluation
and risk management, access to auditing evidence and evidence analysis, drafting and
report of auditing conclusions, as well as formulation of professional responsibilities. The
new standards are based on the structure of international auditing standards and cover
nearly all of its items. They adopt all the basic principles and core procedures of the
international standards. Major aspects such as the auditing objective and principle,
evaluation and risk management, access to auditing evidence and evidence analysis,
drafting and report of auditing conclusions, as well as formulation of professional
responsibilities are in conformity with international auditing standards. China’s auditing
standards now substantially converge with international auditing standards.
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4.2.3.2 Auditors’ professional qualifications
4.2.3.2.1 Qualifications
Auditors require a CPA certificate to practice in China. Acquiring a CPA certificate
requires passing the CPA examination and completing registration. The Law of the
People’s Republic of China on Certified Public Accounts stipulates that the unified
examination system for certified public accountants is implemented nationwide. Article 8
lists the relevant qualifications for applicants sitting the examination i.e. Chinese with
college degree or above; or with accounting or other related majors with mid-level
professional and technical titles or more. Article 9 states that applicants, who pass the
national examination for certified public accountants and have participated in the auditing
business for two years or more, are entitled to apply to the provincial associations of
CPAs for registration. Eligible applicants shall be approved for registration by the
provisional association of CPAs, who report to the Ministry of Finance.
4.2.3.2.2 Revoking qualification
An auditor who is unable to maintain the specified qualifications and competency
standard or does not apply moral or auditing standards, shall lose his or her qualification.
Article 13 of the Law of the People’s Republic of China on Certified Public Accounts
specifies the situation in which auditor qualifications will be cancelled.
4.2.3.3 The independence of the external auditor
All China’s related laws, statutes and departmental ordinances require that a CPA be
independent.
Article 45 of the Securities Law of the People’s Republic of China stipulates that
securities service agencies and personnel offering auditing reports for stock issuance are
not entitled to trade those stocks within their underwriting periods and for six months
after they expire. In addition to the provisions above, securities firms and personnel who
provide auditing reports for listed companies are not entitled to trade those stocks from
the date they were hired until five days after the said documents are published.
Article 22 of the Law of the People’s Republic of China on Certified Public Accounts
prohibits CPAs from conduct that would undermine their independence, including trading
stocks and bonds of the audited units, charging for premiums outside the contract, etc.
The Basic Standards of Professional Ethics for China’s Certified Public Accounts and
Guidance on the Standards of Professional Ethics for China’s Certified Public Accounts
also require auditors to be independent and stipulate that certified public accounts shall
maintain their independence in form and substance. Chapter Two of the Basic Standards
of Professional Ethics for China’s Certified Public Accounts states that certified public
accountants shall maintain their independence in form and substance for auditing or other
verification work. Accounting firms whose independence may be undermined by clients
are not entitled to undertake commissioned auditing or other verification work. Certified
public accountants, who conduct auditing or other verification work and are in conflict
with clients on possible impacts to their independence, shall make an announcement to
their accounting firms and abstain from such activity. Certified public accountants are not
entitled to incorporate additional businesses or concurrently hold other posts that are
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incompatible with auditing or other verification work conducted. Certified public
accountants, when conducting business, shall be practical and realistic and not be
influenced by others nor let personal interests affect the objectivity of their analysis and
judgment. Certified public accountants shall be forthcoming, honest and impartial in
handling conflicts of interest. Articles 8 to 12 of the Guidance on the Standards of
Professional Ethics for China’s Certified Public Accounts describe the factors that may
undermine their independence, including economic interest, self-evaluation, connections,
relationships and external pressure. They also describe the situations that risk affecting
auditors’ independence. Furthermore, Article 13 and 15 define specific measures to be
adopted in order to ensure independence.
The Provision on Regular Rotation of Certified Public Accountants That Sign the
Audits of Securities and Futures (2003), promulgated by the CSRC, contains explicit
clauses on the independence of the responsible certified public accountants. Normally, a
certified public accountant should not provide auditing services to a specific company for
five consecutive years. The continuous auditing services provided to a given company by
the same certified public accountant who signs the accounts while serving different
accounting firms should be considered together. The period of continuous auditing
services to a listed company whose listing was handled by the same certified public
accountant who provided auditing services to the relevant company’s IPO should be no
more than two complete fiscal years.
4.2.3.4 Procedures for the designation, appointment and replacement of external
auditors
According to the Relevant Questions Concerning the Hiring and Changing of
Accounting Firms (Audit Firms) by Listed Companies, published by CSRC, any issues
concerning the employment, dismissal or discontinuing further employment of
accounting firms shall be determined by shareholders’ meetings, and the decisions taken
shall be implemented. Furthermore, in accordance with the regulations of the “Special
Committee of the Board of Directors” (Chapter Six of the Code of Corporate Governance
of Listed Companies), an audit committee reporting to the board of directors of a listed
company shall be responsible for proposals on the employment or changes to the
employment of external auditing firms. Most of the auditors working for external audit
firms shall be independent. The convener of the meetings shall be independent and at
least one independent director shall be a professional accountant.
4.2.3.5 The legal responsibilities of external auditors
Article 173 of the Securities Law states that when an auditing firm produces auditing
reports for listed companies, it shall be diligent and responsible, and examine and verify
the authenticity, accuracy and integrity of the contents of the documents it is working on.
If any false records, misleading statements or major omissions in the documents
produced, incur any loss to any other person, the institution shall bear joint liability
together with the relevant issuer and listed companies, unless the auditing institution is
able to prove it is not at fault. Article 223 of the Securities Law states that when a
securities service institution fails to fulfil its accountability in a diligent manner, resulting
in documents containing false records, misleading statements or major omissions, it shall
be ordered to correct it. The proceeds generated from this business shall be confiscated
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and its securities business licence suspended or revoked. A fine of one to five times its
related business income shall be imposed. The person in charge and any other person
directly responsible shall be given a warning and imposed a fine of CNY 30 000 to CNY
100 000 and the relevant securities practice qualifications shall be revoked. In addition to
the sanctions imposed by the Securities Law, the Administrative Methods on Information
Disclosure by Listed Companies stipulate that the CSRC may adopt such supervisory
measures as ordering corrections, supervising discussions, sending warning letters and
making records in the “credit records” to the above securities service agencies in
accordance with law. When administrative sanctions are imposed, the CSRC shall enforce
the sanction by law.
In addition to the liability for damage of civil affairs, related personnel shall be held
criminally responsible for the serious false content of auditor reports. Article 229 of the
Criminal Law states that a person of an intermediary organisation performing such
functions as asset evaluation or examination, certificate examination, accounting,
auditing, legal services, who provides intentionally false documentary evidence, shall be
sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than five years or criminal detention,
and fined concurrently if the circumstance is serious. A person who extorts another
person’s property or accepts another person’s property illegally, thus committing a crime
under the preceding paragraph, shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not less
than five years and not more than ten years and fined. A person who seriously neglects
his or her duty and provides documentary evidence which is inconsistent with the facts,
thus causing a serious consequence, shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not
more than three years or criminal detention, and fined.
4.2.4 Principle V.E: Channels for disseminating information should provide for
equal, timely and cost-efficient access to relevant information by users.
4.2.4.1 The principle of equal and timely access to information
The Securities Law and Administrative Methods on Information Disclosure by Listed
Companies stipulate that a listed company shall do their best to fulfil the obligation of
information disclosure, and disclose all the major events that may have a significant
impact on its share trading price. CSRC announced further requirements in the Notice on
Regulating Disclosure of Listed Companies and the Acts of All the Related Parties,
prescribing not only that a listed company shall strive to fulfil the obligation of
information disclosure, but also disclose all sensitive and major events that may have a
great impact on the stock price to all its investors fairly, to give them all access to the
same information. It shall not disclose information selectively or to specific persons in
advance. Such persons include – but are not limited to – the institutions and individuals
that engage in securities investment, securities analysis, consultancy or other securities
service industries, and the related parties of the said institutions and individuals. CSRC
branches and stock exchanges shall supervise and oversee the implementation of the
principle of equity of information disclosure by listed companies. Listed companies and
any other relevant person responsible who violate the regulations shall be investigated
and dealt with in accordance with the law.
The Securities Law and Administrative Methods on Information Disclosure by Listed
Companies and other relevant laws and regulations state that the listed companies shall
undertake the obligations of continuous information disclosure, and disclose the
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information to investors that may have a great impact on their decision-making on a
timely basis. Information may be disclosed in two forms: periodic reports and temporary
reports (see details in “V.A material information” in this chapter). The Company Law
prescribes that listed companies shall set up a secretariat for the board of directors, acting
as a senior manager of a company, specialised in dealing with information disclosure to
guarantee continuous and timely information disclosure.
4.2.4.2 Timely and low-cost information dissemination channels
The CSRC has made detailed provisions regarding dissemination channels for
information disclosure. The Administrative Methods on Information Disclosure by Listed
Companies stipulate that the information disclosed shall be published through the media
designated by the CSRC. Information shall not be published on corporate websites or any
other media prior to this designation. Press releases and Q&A interviews may not be used
to replace the reporting and announcing obligation, not shall periodic reports replace
extraordinary reporting.
Newspapers and websites are the media designated by CSRC, ensuring the
convenient and low-cost information dissemination to all the investors.
4.2.4.2.1 Newspapers and periodicals
The newspapers and periodicals used for listed companies designated by the CSRC
include the following: China Daily, China’s Reform Report, Securities Journal, China
Securities Journal, Shanghai Securities News, Securities Times, Financial Times and
Securities Market Weekly. The initial disclosure of important information from listed
companies, periodic reports and temporary reports, shall be published at least in one
designated newspaper or periodical. When the CSRC, stock exchanges, securities firms
and other market participants release major news or important measures, they also need
the media’s cooperation on reporting.
4.2.4.2.2 Websites
Information to be disclosed by listed companies to stock exchanges shall be disclosed
free of charge on the stock exchange website. Investors and other users can access them
free of charge on those websites.
The Growth Enterprise Market (GEM) established at the Shenzhen Stock Exchange
makes further efforts to promote paperless information disclosure through the full use of
information technologies characterised by low costs and high efficiency. The following
five websites are designated for GEM information disclosure: CNINFO, CS, CNSTOCK,
SECUTIMES, CCSTOCK. These designated websites shall provide specialised platforms
for legal information disclosure of GEM-listed companies and publish free of charge all
the GEM listed companies’ prospectus, listing particulars, temporary announcements,
periodic reports and other information such as relevant policies and law regulations
published by the CSRC and the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.
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4.2.5 Principle V.F: The corporate governance framework should be
complemented by an effective approach that addresses and promotes the
provision of analysis or advice by analysts, brokers, rating agencies and others,
that is relevant to investors’ decisions, free from material conflicts of interest
that might compromise the integrity of their analysis or advice.
4.2.5.1 Qualifications of security consultancy agencies, and information
disclosure requirements
In order to strengthen management of the securities and futures investment
consultancy business, the CSRC released the Interim Procedures on the Administration of
Securities and Futures Investment Consultancy. This focuses on the activities of the
agencies and their consultants engaged in the securities and futures consultancy business,
which include direct or indirect paid consultancy services for securities and futures
investors or clients with securities and futures investment analyses, forecasts or proposals
and other services. These activities involve: (1) accepting the entrustment of an investor
or client and providing securities and futures investment consultancy services; (2) holding
seminars, lectures and analysis meetings on securities and futures investment
consultancy; (3) publishing articles, commentaries and reports on securities and futures
investment consultancy in newspapers and periodicals, and providing securities and
futures investment consultancy services through the mass media (radio stations, television
stations, etc.); (4) providing securities and futures investment consultancy services
through telephone, fax, computer networks and other telecommunications systems;
(5) other forms authenticated by the CSRC. In China, the above-mentioned investment
consultancy businesses must obtain the permission of the CSRC. No institution or
individual may engage in the above-mentioned business without permission.
A person who engages in the securities and futures investment consultancy business
must obtain the relevant employment qualifications and join an agency with operational
qualifications for securities and futures investment consultancy before engaging in the
business. He or she must have at least a university education, pass the qualification
examinations for securities and futures and have more than two years’ experience in the
securities or futures business before obtaining the employment qualifications for
securities and futures investment consultancy.
Interim Procedures on the Administration of Securities and Futures Investment
Consultancy stipulates that a securities and futures investment firm and its investment
consultants shall provide their services to investors and clients with the required attitudes
of the trade: discretion, honesty, diligence and fulfilment of responsibility. They shall use
the relevant information and materials completely, objectively and accurately to provide
investment analyses, forecasts and proposals, and must not quote or alter relevant
information and materials out of context. They shall provide the sources and copyright
owners when quoting relevant information and materials. A securities and futures
investment firm and its investment consultants must not provide investment analyses,
forecasts or proposals to investors or clients on the basis of false information, market
rumours or inside information. When publishing articles, reports or views on investment
consultancy in newspapers, periodicals, radio stations, television stations or other media,
a securities and futures investment consultant must provide the name of the securities and
futures investment consultancy agency in which the person is employed, give the person’s
real name and a detailed explanation of investment risks. A securities and futures
investment firm must provide the name and address of the agency, the telephone
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number(s) and the name(s) of the contact when providing securities and futures
investment consultancy faxes to investors or clients.
In order to avoid a conflict of interest between the investment consultancy agency or
its investment consultants and investors, the Securities Law requires that no securities and
futures investment firm and its investment consultants may engage in the following
activities:
1. Securities and futures buying and selling as an agent of investors;
2. Agreement with investors on the sharing of returns or losses of the investment;
3. Buying and selling of stocks and other securities and futures on their own behalf;
4. Manipulating the market or engaging in insider trading by exploiting the
consultancy services in collaboration with others;
5. Other fraudulent acts in securities and futures prohibited by laws, rules and
regulations.
Investment firms and rating organisations engaged in the securities service business
shall charge fees according to standards prescribed by the State Council’s relevant
administrative departments.
The investment analyses, forecasts or proposals provided to different clients on the
same issue by a securities and futures investment firm shall be consistent. Securities firms
with a consultancy business shall be consistent in providing suggestions on the same
question to the consultancy business and to the public. It shall not mislead the public in
the interest of profit-gaining for its own benefit. The underwriter, sponsor or relevant
securities firm of the company whose public issuance of shares has been approved by the
CSRC may not publish in the mass media its investment analysis report written for
clients.
Recently, the CSRC took action to regulate the behaviour of securities research
institutes when publishing research reports. Securities firms are required to act in strict
accordance with the provisions of the Securities Law, Rules on Supervision over
Securities Companies, Interim Measures for the Administration of Securities and Futures
Investment Consultancy, Provisions on Strengthening the Administration of Securities
and Futures Information Communication, Guidance for Internal Control of Securities
Firms and Notice on Several Issues Concerning Standardisation of the Business of
Securities Investment Consultancy for Public. They are required to standardise the
publication of their research reports and strengthen management over participation in
securities programmes in the media. Securities firms are banned from manipulating
securities prices, interest transfer, engaging in securities trading with insider information
or misleading investors. While publishing research reports and participating in securities
programmes in the media, securities firms should observe the principle of being
independent, objective, equitable, respecting their fiduciary duty and be professional
when making comments on the macro economy, industrial analysis and market trends,
and exercise prudence on opinions when analysing specific securities. They must not
spread false, partial or misleading information or make definitive judgments on the rise or
fall of securities prices or market trends.
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4.2.5.2 Brokers
In order to bolster the supervision and administration of securities brokers,
standardise their professional behaviour and protect the legitimate rights and interests of
their clients, the CSRC formulated the Interim Regulations on the Administration of
Securities Brokers (2009), which clearly defines securities brokers as the natural persons
outside securities companies who accept the commissions of the securities companies to
engage in activities including client solicitation and services on their behalf. Securities
brokers, who are securities practitioners, must pass the examination to qualify as
securities practitioners and meet the stipulated professional conditions. Securities
companies can engage in certain activities including client solicitation and services
through their staff or by entrusting persons external to the companies. Securities brokers
are required to follow the Rules on Supervision of Securities Companies to entrust
activities to external persons. Securities companies shall establish a sound administration
system for securities brokers, take effective measures, implement centralised and unified
management towards the securities brokers and their practice, guarantee the basic
professional ethics and business qualities of the securities brokers, and prevent the
securities brokers from breaking the laws and regulations, acting beyond the agency
authority and going against clients’ legal rights and interests.
4.2.5.3 Credit-rating agencies
In order to promote the standardised development of the securities market credit-
rating business, enhance the efficiency and transparency of the securities market and
protect the legitimate rights and interests of investors and social public interests, the
CSRC published the Interim Measures for the Administration of the Credit-Rating
Business Regarding the Securities Market (2007). Credit-rating agencies should apply to
the CSRC for a securities rating business permit, without which no organisation or
individual may engage in the securities rating business. Securities rating agencies should
follow the consistency principle while engaging in the securities rating business, i.e.,
consistent rating criteria and work procedures should be followed for subjects of the same
category or in follow-up ratings on the same subject. When rating criteria is readjusted,
full disclosure should be conducted. Securities rating agencies should formulate scientific
rating methods and a fully fledged quality control system, follow industrial standards,
professional ethics and code of business conduct with fiduciary duties, and be diligent in
carrying out their duties and prudent in their analyses.
4.2.5.4 Asset appraisal institutions
In order to strengthen the administration of asset appraisal institutions engaging in the
securities and futures-related business, maintain order on the securities market and protect
the legitimate rights and interests of investors and public, the Ministry of Finance and the
CSRC jointly issued the Notice on Issues Concerning Asset Appraisal Agencies Engaging
in Business Relating to Securities and Futures, requiring asset appraisal institutions to
obtain the relevant qualifications to engage in securities-related business. The following
asset appraisal agencies may not apply for securities rating qualifications: a) those that
have been penalised criminally or administratively in business operations (for three years
upon completion of penalty), or b) those whose qualification was revoked on the grounds
that they obtained securities appraisal qualification by deception or other irregular means
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(for three years after their rights were revoked), or c) those whose application was not
accepted or approved on the grounds that information was concealed or false (for three
years after the issuance by the authority of a non-acceptance or non-approval document).
4.2.5.5 Legal obligations
The Securities Law stipulates that any investment consultancy agency, financial
consultancy agency, assets evaluation organisation and accounting firm that engages in
the securities service business without permission shall be ordered to suspend business
and will be confiscated of the illegal gains and imposed a fine greater than the value of its
illegal gains and less than five times the value of illegal gains.
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Chapter 5
Board and supervisory board: responsibility and supervision
5.1 Overview of the board of directors and supervisory board system in China
The Company Law governing listed companies in China was promulgated in 1993. It
introduced boards of directors and supervisory boards, and clearly provided that
companies limited by shares should set up shareholders’ meetings, a board of directors
and a supervisory board. Since then, Chinese listed companies have made great progress
in the establishment of a board system, gradually introducing an independent director
system and a specialised committee system and laying the foundations for the board’s
independence and effective operations. Meanwhile, the establishment of mechanisms
such as the election, terms of reference and responsibility investigation has paved the way
for the board to provide strategic guidance, effective supervision over management and
protection of the interests of companies and shareholders. In the creation and
construction of the supervisory board, the Company Law amended in 2006 expanded the
functions and power of the supervisory board, enabling it to play its role of supervision to
the full.
5.1.1 The main features of the Chinese board system
5.1.1.1 Strengthening the board’s loyalty, due diligence and protection of the
benefits of companies and shareholders
In 2006, the Company Law was revised for the first time and clearly presented the
primary function of the board: “to abide by the law, administrative laws and regulations,
and articles of incorporation and have the duty of loyalty and diligence to companies”.
The meaning of the duty of loyalty and diligence indicates that Chinese law and
regulations are designed to protect the benefits of companies and shareholders.
Hereafter, the Listed Company Director Selection and Conduction Guidance and
SME Board Listed Company Director Conduct Guidance, both issued by the Shenzhen
Stock Exchange have more detailed and specific requirements on the directors’ duty of
loyalty and diligence.
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5.1.1.2 Establishing mechanisms for the board’s supervision and restraints over
management
The Company Law provides that limited companies should have managers, who are
hired and dismissed by the board. The corporate board may decide that a member of the
board can also serve as a manager. On the one hand, the board may evaluate and
supervise the operation and achievements of management by selecting managers. On the
other hand, centralised power makes management teams realistically emphasise the
efficiency of decision-making to improve companies’ performance.
By hiring independent directors, establishing management’s remuneration and setting
up an audit committee, nomination committee and remuneration and appraisal committee,
listed companies supervise and motivate managers. Companies also regularly disclose
directors’, supervisors’ and senior managers’ remuneration to shareholders.
5.1.1.3 The establishment of the independent director system
An independent director is a director who holds no other position than that of an
independent director in the company. He or she has no relations that prevent them from
making an independent and objective judgment. An independent director shall perform
his or her duty independently and not be influenced by the main shareholders, actual
controllers, or other entities or individuals which have significant relations with the listed
company.
In China, an independent director may in principle serve on the board of at most five
listed companies as an independent director and ensure that he or she has enough time
and energy to effectively perform the duty of an independent director. The Code of
Corporate Governance of Listed Companies in China stipulates that independent
directors shall account for more than one-third of the board in a listed company.
Independent directors shall be independent of their employer and the company’s main
shareholders. Independent directors shall hold no other position but that of independent
directors.
5.1.1.4 Establishing special committees of the board
In China, special committees of the board on the one hand take charge of the daily
operations and decisions in comparatively independent fields, and on the other hand,
provide consultation and suggestions to the board on important decisions in the field. To a
large degree, the special committee is the extension of the independent director system
and is good for improving the independence and effectiveness of the board’s operations
as well as controlling risks.
The Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies in China stipulates that
according to the resolution of the general shareholders’ meeting, a listed company’s board
may set up special committees on strategy, audit, nomination, remuneration and appraisal,
etc. All of the special committee members are directors. Thereinafter, independent
directors shall account for more than half of the committee members and act as conveners
in audit committees, nomination committees and remuneration and appraisal committees.
In audit committees, at least one independent director should have an accounting
background.
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5.1.2 The main features of the supervisory board
5.1.2.1 Strengthening the basic duties of the supervisory board: loyalty, diligence
and protection of the interests of companies and shareholders.
In China, the supervisory board is also obliged to be loyal and diligent and to protect
the interests of the company and shareholders. The Company Law revised in 2006 clearly
provides that the supervisory board is obliged “to abide by the law, administrative laws
and regulations and the articles of association of the company and have the duty of
loyalty and diligence for companies”.
The Shenzhen Stock Exchange has issued Guidance on the Operation of Companies
Listed on the Main Board, Guidance on the Operation of Companies Listed on the SME
Board and Guidance on the Operation of Companies Listed on the Growth Enterprise
Board, defining more detailed and specific requirements on the supervisors’ duty of
loyalty and diligence.
5.1.2.2 Establishing mechanisms of supervision and restraint over the board of
directors and the management by the supervisory board
The supervisory board is a permanent supervisory body under the leadership of, and
responsible to, the shareholders’ meeting. It exercises its supervisory power over the
board of directors, management and the whole company independently. To ensure the
independence of the supervisors and supervisory board, the supervisors may not
concurrently take the office of director or senior executive. The supervisory board carries
out comprehensive supervision of the company’s operations and management including:
inspecting the company’s financial status, supervising the performance of duty by
directors and senior executives, and proposing to remove from office any director or
senior executive that has violated the law, regulations, articles of association or resolution
of the shareholders’ meeting, requesting directors and senior executives to rectify their
behaviour when it undermines company interest, initiating ad hoc shareholders’ meetings,
calling upon and presiding on shareholders’ meetings when the board of directors fails to
do so, according to law, tabling draft resolutions for the shareholders’ meetings and filing
suit against directors and senior executives under certain conditions.
5.1.2.3 Mutual complementarily with the role of independent directors
Independent directors and the supervisory board both act as a company’s internal
supervision mechanisms. They each have their respective features and attend to their own
duties and are mutually complementary rather than conflicting with each other. Relatively
speaking, independent directors, an important component of the company’s decision-
making body, are in a position to take up in the decision-making process over major
company affairs and therefore provide ex ante supervision. The supervisory board mainly
plays a role of ex post supervision.
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5.2 China’s practices compared with the OECD principles
5.2.1 Principle VI. A states that directors and supervisors should act on a fully
informed basis, in good faith, with due diligence and care and in the best
interests of the company and its shareholders
This OECD Principle points out the two key elements of the responsibilities of
directors and supervisors, two duties: care and loyalty. The Company Law and a number
of regulations issued by the stock exchanges all clearly require the two duties on the part
of board members.
Article 148 of the Company Law provides that the board of directors and supervisory
board are required “to abide by the law, administrative laws and regulations and the
articles of association of the company and have a duty of loyalty and diligence to
companies. The directors shall not, by taking advantage of their positions and powers,
accept bribes or other unlawful incomes, nor may they misappropriate the property of the
company.”
5.2.1.1 Duty of loyalty
Article 149 in the Company Law stipulates that directors shall comply with the duty
of loyalty to the company and shall not commit any of the following acts. The company
will confiscate any unlawful income if the regulation is not followed, for example:
5.2.1.1.1 Directors shall not divert, misappropriate or lend the company’s capital,
or serve as guarantors of the company’s capital. They shall not misappropriate the
company’s funds, deposit the company’s assets in their own personal accounts or
in personal accounts of other individuals in violation of the company’s articles of
association and without the consent of the general shareholders’ meeting or the
board of directors. They shall not lend the company’s funds to others or use the
company’s property to provide a guarantee to others.
5.2.1.1.2 Directors shall not enter into contracts or conduct transactions with the
company in violation of the company’s articles of association or without the
consent of the shareholders’ meeting, the shareholders’ general meeting or the
board of directors, They shall not take advantage of their positions, seek for
themselves or others a commercial opportunity that should fall to the company, or
conduct the same business as the company for themselves or others. They shall
not accept a commission in a transaction between others and the company.
5.2.1.1.3 Directors shall not disclose the company’s secrets without authorisation
or commit other acts in violation of their duty of loyalty to the company.
Article 97 in the Guidance for the Articles of Association of the Listed Companies
also follows the regulation on directors’ duty of loyalty in the Company Law, and points
out that if a director causes damage to the company, he or she shall assume their
compensation liability. The company may, in accordance with specific circumstances,
add other requirements in the Articles of Association upon the directors’ behalf. Article
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136 of the Guidance for the Articles of Association of the Listed Companies provides for
the supervisors’ duty of loyalty, while Article 141 prohibits supervisors from
undermining company interests by using their affiliations, and provides that where a
supervisor causes damage to the company, he or she shall assume the responsibility of
compensation.
Chapter 3 of the Guidance on Appointment and Activities of Directors of Listed
Companies of the Shanghai Stock Exchange specifies the duty of loyalty stipulated in the
Company Law. Firstly, directors shall not harm the interest of a listed company due to a
third party’s interest; and if discovering that the behaviour of a listed company or the
third party may harm the company’s interest, directors shall require them to explain and
correct the damage and make a report to the board on a timely basis. When necessary, the
convening of the directors is advised for the review. Secondly, a director shall disclose to
a listed company matters such as horizontal competition, business contact, debtor-creditor
relationship, shareholding and other business connections or conflicts of the director
himself and his close relatives. Related directors shall avoid voting. Thirdly, a director
shall keep a listed company’s secrets and shall not release material information that a
listed company has not released to the public through designated media.
Article 4 of the Shenzhen Stock Exchange Small and Medium Enterprise Board
Director Conduct Guidance sets out the basic principles of the duty of loyalty: a director
shall be loyal to the company, its shareholders, and their interests, exercising power
within the scope of their functions and powers with the company’s interest as a starting
point, and strictly avoiding conflict between their own and the company’s interests.
5.2.1.2. Duty of care
Articles 150 and 151 of the Company Law stipulate that the director, supervisor and
top managerial personnel shall be liable, if they violate any regulations, laws,
administrative rules or articles of association of the company and caused damage to the
company when they exercise their functions on behalf of the company. The shareholders’
meeting or the general shareholders’ meeting requires that the director, the supervisor and
top managerial personnel shall be present at the meeting and that the director, the
supervisor and top managerial personnel shall accept the shareholders’ enquiry. The
director and top managerial personnel shall provide the board of supervisors with the true
relevant situation and materials and shall not prevent the board of supervisors from
exercising their power.
Article 98 of the Guidance for the Articles of Association of Listed Companies
stipulates that the director is also responsible for the company’s duty of diligence. This
involves: ensuring that the company’s behaviour complies with the laws, administrative
regulations and various economic policies in China, that commercial activity not exceed
the business scope stipulated by the business licence, and that shareholders be treated
fairly. The director is also required to know the company’s operational and management
situation on a timely basis and draft signed, written confirmation opinions regularly that
ensure that the information disclosed by the company is true, correct and complete, and
the company may add more requirements on the company’s duty of diligence in its
articles of association according to the specific situation. Article 136 of the Guidance for
the Articles of Association of Listed Companies provides for the supervisors’ duty of
diligence, while Article 141 provides that any supervisor violating the law, regulation,
department decree or the company’s articles of association in the performance of his or
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her duty and causing damage to the company shall assume the responsibility of
compensation.
Chapter 4 of the Guidance on Appointment and Activities of Directors of Listed
Companies of the Shanghai Stock Exchange provides the details of the director’s duty of
diligence and points out that claiming for removing exemption from an obligation is not
allowed except in the case of unfamiliarity with the business or unawareness of relevant
items.
Article 4 of the Shenzhen Stock Exchange SME Board Listed Company Director
Conduct Guidance prescribes the basic principles of the director’s duty of diligence.
Directors shall be diligent and responsible, shall positively strive to perform their duties
using their knowledge, skills and experience, help the company abide by laws,
regulations, rules, the related rules of the Exchange and the articles of association of the
company, and endeavour to protect the rights and interests of the company, shareholders,
and especially the public shareholders.
5.2.1.3 Report on the board of directors’ work
Articles 28 and 29 of the Rules for the General Meetings of Shareholders of Listed
Companies stipulate that at the annual shareholders’ meeting, the board of directors and
supervisory board shall report their work conducted during the year running up to the
meeting and every independent director shall report on his or her work. The directors and
supervisors shall offer explanations and clarification to shareholder enquiries. These
annual reports on the work of the board of directors and the supervisory board provide an
institutional mechanism for the two boards to effectively implement their duties.
5.2.2 Principle VI. B: Where board decisions may affect different shareholder
groups differently, the board should treat all shareholders fairly.
Article 113 and 148 of the Company Law stipulates that directors shall carefully carry
out the duties prescribed by the relevant laws, regulations and articles of association of
the company, ensure that the company should abide by them, treat all the shareholders
fairly and take into account the interests of other stakeholders.
5.2.2.1 Directors prohibited from voting at board meetings
Directors are prohibited from voting at board meetings in China in the case of related-
party transactions. Article 125 of the Company Law stipulates that where any director of a
listed company has a related-party relationship with enterprises related to matters to be
resolved at the board of directors’ meetings, the director is not entitled to exercise his or
her voting rights upon such resolutions nor exercise the voting rights on behalf of other
directors. Board of directors’ meetings may be held only if more than half of the directors
having no such related-party relationship attend the meetings.
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5.2.2.2 Requirements on the minimum number of unrelated directors
Article 125 of the Company Law stipulates that the resolution made at the board of
directors’ meeting shall be passed by more than half of directors having no related-party
relationship. Where the number of attending directors having no such related-party
relationship is less than three, such matters shall be submitted to the shareholders’ general
meeting for examination and discussion.
5.2.2.3 Cumulative voting system
Article 106 of the Company Law stipulates that when a shareholders’ general meeting
elects directors, the cumulative voting system may be practised in accordance with the
provisions of the articles of association or the resolution of the shareholders’ general
meeting. The cumulative voting system referred to in this Law comes into play when a
shareholders’ general meeting elects directors. Each share has the voting rights equal to
the number of directors to be elected, and the concentrated use of the voting rights held
by a shareholder is permitted.
When a shareholder votes for directors, the total vote is the product of the number of
the person’s shares and the number of directors to be elected. In the process of voting,
shareholder may concentrate their votes on one or several director candidates. With the
partially concentrated voting method, minority shareholders are able to elect directors in
line with their own interests and avoid the appointment of all directors being monopolized
by majority shareholders. This is to ensure that the board of directors acts on behalf of the
interests of all shareholders.
5.2.3 Principle VI. C: The board of directors and the supervisory board should
apply high ethical standards. They should take stakeholders’ interests into
account.
5.2.3.1 Employee directors and supervisors should play their due role in
safeguarding the rights and interests of employees.
According to Article 109 of the Company Law, the board of directors of a company
limited by shares may include representatives from among the staff and workers of the
company. The inclusion of an employee representative on the board may to a certain
extent guarantee the presence of workers’ representatives and therefore their interests in
its decision-making process. Article 118 of the same law provides that a company limited
by shares shall have a supervisory board composed of no fewer than three members, that
the supervisory board shall include representatives of shareholders, the staff, and workers
of the company in an appropriate proportion and no fewer than one-third of the total
number of supervisors as determined by the company’s articles of association, and that
the representatives of the staff and workers on the supervisory board shall be
democratically elected by the staff and workers of the company at a conference or general
meeting, or similar occasion of the representatives of the staff and workers.
Article 85 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that a
listed company shall encourage feedback from its employees regarding the company’s
operating and financial situations and important decisions affecting employees’ benefits
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through direct communications with the board of directors and the supervisory board.
This encourages employees to actively express their opinions to the board of directors and
supervisory board to be taken into consideration in the decision-making process.
5.2.3.2 Respect the rights and interests of the stakeholders and provide the
necessary conditions to safeguard their rights and interests
Chapter 6 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies’ Stakeholders,
and Article 81, in particular, stipulate that a company shall respect the legal rights of its
stakeholders, including banks and other creditors, employees, customers, suppliers, and
the community. As the decision-making board of a company, the board of directors shall
take into consideration and respect the benefits of stakeholders when making decisions.
In addition, Chapter 6 also stipulates that a company shall provide the necessary
means to ensure the legal rights of its stakeholders, who shall be entitled to the
opportunities and channels for redress of any infringement upon their rights. A company
shall provide the required information to banks and other creditors to enable them to
make judgements and decisions about the company’s operating and financial situation.
5.2.4 Principle VI. D: The board should fulfil certain key functions
5.2.4.1 Principle VI. D 1: The key functions of the board are: reviewing and
guiding corporate strategy, major plans of action, risk policy, annual budgets and
business plans; setting performance objectives; monitoring implementation and
corporate performance; and overseeing major capital expenditure, acquisitions
and divestitures.
Article 47 of the Company Law stipulates that the functions and powers to be
exercised by the board of directors include: deciding the business plans and investment
plans of the company; drawing up the annual financial budget plan and final accounts
plan; formulating plans for mergers, divisions, dissolutions or changes to the company’s
corporate form; convening shareholders’ meetings and reporting on its work therein;
implementing the resolutions of the shareholders’ meetings; formulating plans for profit
distribution, and for making up for corporate losses; formulating plans for the increase or
reduction of the registered capital and issue of company bonds; deciding on the
establishment of the company’s internal management bodies; formulating the company’s
basic management system, and; exercising other functions and powers prescribed in the
company’s articles of association.
Article 124 of the Guidance for the Articles of Association of Listed Companies
stipulates that the manager and deputy manager are employed and can be dismissed by
the board of directors. Article 106 stipulates that, within the scope authorised by the
shareholders’ meetings, the board of directors decides on the matters concerning the
company’s external investment, buying and selling assets, etc. Article 110 stipulates that
the board of directors shall set forth the scope of external investment, buying and selling
assets, establish strict procedures of examination and decision-making. Major investment
items shall be subject to the evaluation of the relevant experts and professionals and be
submitted to the shareholders’ meeting for approval.
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5.2.4.2 Principle VI. D 2: Monitoring the effectiveness of the company’s
governance practices and making changes as needed.
Through the selection and replacement of executives, the board of directors may
adjust the company’s operations and governance practices. It is stipulated in the Code of
Corporate Governance of Listed Companies that the key functions of the nomination
committee include: studying the criteria and procedures for selecting directors and
managers as well as making suggestions; extensively seeking qualified directors and
manager candidates and; examining director and manager candidates and making
suggestions.
On June 28, 2009, the Basic Standard for Enterprise Internal Control was released
jointly by the Ministry of Finance, the National Audit Office, the CSRC, CBRC and
CIRC. Article 12 stipulates that the board of directors is responsible for the establishment,
improvement and effective implementation of internal control; Article 13 specifies that an
enterprise shall establish an audit committee reporting to the board of directors. The audit
committee shall be responsible for examining the internal control of the company,
overseeing the effective implementation and self-evaluation of internal control,
coordinating the internal control auditing and other relevant matters. Article 45 stipulates
that an enterprise shall formulate its policy to identify weaknesses in its internal control,
analyse the nature and causes of the internal control defects discovered during the
monitoring process, put forward the improvement plans and report to the board of
directors, board of supervisors and managerial personnel on a timely basis and in an
appropriate manner.
5.2.4.3 Principle VI. D 3: Selecting, compensating, monitoring and, when
necessary, replacing key executives and overseeing succession planning.
Article 47 of the Company Law stipulates that the board of directors may decide on
matters concerning the recruitment or dismissal of the company’s manager and their
remuneration, and decide, based upon the manager’s appointment, on the recruitment or
dismissal of the company’s deputy manager(s) and persons in charge of financial affairs
as well as matters concerning their remuneration.
Articles 77-80 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies provide
that a listed company shall establish an incentive mechanism linking the managerial
personnel’s remuneration with the company’s performance and the individuals’
performance. The performance assessment of management personnel shall become a
basis for determining the compensation and other rewarding arrangements for the person
reviewed. The managerial personnel’s remuneration distribution plan shall be subject to
approval by the board of directors, explained at the shareholders’ meeting and disclosed.
The company shall specify in its articles of association the managerial personnel’s duties
and responsibilities. If the managerial personnel violate laws, regulations and the
company’s articles of association, and cause damages to the company, the board of
directors shall actively take measures to investigate and pursue the legal liabilities of such
personnel.
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5.2.4.4 Principle VI. D 4: Aligning key executive and board remuneration with the
longer-term interests of the company and its shareholders.
Article 56 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that
the main duties of the remuneration and appraisal committee are (1) to study the appraisal
standard for directors and managerial personnel, to conduct appraisals and make
recommendations; and (2) to study and review the remuneration policies and schemes for
directors and executives.
Articles 69-70 stipulate that a listed company shall establish fair and transparent
standards and procedures for the assessment of the performance of directors, supervisors
and executives. The evaluation of the directors and executives shall be conducted by the
board of directors or by its remuneration and appraisal committee. The evaluation of the
performance of independent directors shall be conducted through a combination of self-
review and peer review.
5.2.4.5 Principle VI. D 5: Ensuring a formal and transparent board nomination
and election process.
Article 28 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that a
company shall establish a standardised and transparent procedure in its articles of
association for the election of directors to ensure the openness, fairness, impartialness and
independence of the election.
Articles 29-30 stipulate that detailed information regarding the candidates for
directorship shall be disclosed before the shareholders’ meeting is convened to ensure
that shareholders have adequate knowledge about the candidates at the time they vote.
Candidates for directorship shall accept their nomination in writing, to warrant the
authenticity and completeness of the information provided to the candidate and publicly
disclosed, and shall promise to perform their duties in earnest once elected.
Articles 31-32 specify that the election of directors shall fully reflect the opinions of
minority shareholders. A cumulative voting system shall be advanced in shareholders’
meetings for the election of directors. Listed companies with over 30% their shares
owned by controlling shareholders shall adopt a cumulative voting system. These
companies shall stipulate the detailed implementation of rules and regulations for the
cumulative voting system in their articles of association. Appointment agreements shall
be entered into by a listed company and its directors to clarify such matters as the rights
and obligations between the company and the director, the term of the directorship, the
director’s liabilities in the case of a breach of laws, regulations or articles of association,
and compensation from the company in case it violates the appointment agreement and
terminates the contract earlier than planned.
5.2.4.6 Principle VI. D 6: Monitoring and managing potential conflicts of interest
of management, board members and shareholders, including misuse of corporate
assets and abuse in related-party transactions.
In order to prevent conflicts of interest, the Company Law stipulates that the related
directors shall avoid voting on certain matters (see details VI.B of this chapter).
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Articles 12-14 stipulate that written agreements shall be entered into for related-party
transactions between a listed company and its connected parties and the relevant matters
shall be disclosed. Listed companies should adopt efficient measures to prevent related
parties from interfering with the company’s operations and damaging the company’s
interests by monopolising purchase or sales channels. The company shall adopt efficient
measures to prevent its shareholders and their related parties from misappropriating or
transferring capital, assets or other resources of the company through various means.
The Fifth Part of the Guiding Opinions on the Establishment of the Independent
Director System by Listed Companies (Listed Companies Should Fully Exploit the Role
of Independent directors) specifies that major connected transactions (namely proposed
connected transactions between the listed company and a connected person with a total
value of more than CNY 3 million (EUR 325 500) or more than 5% of the listed
company’s most recently audited net asset value) should be submitted to the board of
directors for deliberation after approval by independent directors;
Article 96 of the Guidance for the Articles of Association of Listed Companies allows
the manager or other top managerial personnel to serve concurrently as the director.
However, such directorship concurrently assumed by the manager or other senior
managerial personnel or employee representatives shall not exceed half the total number
of board of directors. The conflict of interest caused by the situation in which the board of
directors is controlled by management can be effectively prevented by limiting the
number of members of the board and the managerial personnel on the board who overlap.
5.2.4.7 Principle VI. D 7: Ensuring the integrity of the corporation’s accounting
and financial reporting systems, including the independent audit, and that
appropriate systems of control are in place for risk management, financial and
operational control, and compliance with the law and relevant standards.
The board of directors’ audit committee shall ensure the effectiveness of enterprise
internal control and the authenticity and accuracy of financial data.
Article 54 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies lays down that
that the main duties of the audit committee are: (1) to recommend the engagement or
replacement of the company’s external auditing institutions; (2) to review the internal
audit system and its implementation; (3) to oversee the interaction between the
company’s internal and external auditing institutions; (4) to inspect the company’s
financial information and its disclosure; and (5) to monitor the company’s internal control
system.
The amended Company Law (2006) grants the supervisory board the right to carry out
an investigation when it finds the company operation abnormal and, when necessary, to
hire accounting firms to assist in its investigation, with the company covering their
expenses. Article 60 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies also
provides that the supervisory board may independently hire intermediary institutions to
offer professional opinions.
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5.2.4.8 Principle VI. D 8: Overseeing the process of disclosure and
communications
Article 3 of the Administrative Measures on Information Disclosure by Listed
Companies states that the directors of issuers and listed companies shall perform their
duties faithfully and diligently, and ensure the veracity, accuracy, completeness,
timeliness and impartiality of the information disclosed. Article 24 stipulates that the
directors of a company shall sign and endorse regular reports. If directors are unable to
ensure the veracity, accuracy and completeness of a regular report or differing views are
held, their reasons and opinions shall be stated and disclosed.
Article 90 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies specifies that the
secretary of the board of directors shall be in charge of information disclosure, including
drawing up rules for information disclosure, receiving visits, providing consultation,
contacting shareholders, providing publicly disclosed information about the company to
investors. Articles 87-89 stipulate that information disclosure is an ongoing responsibility
for listed companies. A listed company shall disclose information truthfully, accurately,
completely and in a timely manner, as required by laws and regulations and the company’s
articles of association. In addition to disclosing mandatory information, a company shall
also voluntarily disclose all other information that may have a material effect on the
decisions of shareholders and stakeholders, and shall ensure equal access to information for
all shareholders, on a timely basis. Information disclosed by a listed company shall be
easily comprehensible. Companies shall ensure cost-effective, convenient and speedy
access to information through various means (such as the Internet).
5.2.5 Principle VI. E: The board should be able to exercise objective
independent judgement on corporate affairs
5.2.5.1 Principle VI.E.1: Boards should consider assigning a sufficient number of
non-executive board members capable of offering independent judgement when
there is a potential for conflict of interest, for example, in ensuring the integrity of
financial and non-financial reporting, reviewing related-party transactions,
nominating board members and key executives, and board remuneration.
5.2.5.1.1 The significance of independent directors
The first part of Guiding Opinion on the Establishment of Independent Director
Systems by Listed Companies (Listed Companies Should Establish Independent Director
Systems) claims that the term “independent director of a listed company” means a
director who does not hold any position in the company other than director and who has
no relationship with the listed company or its principal shareholders that could hinder him
or her from making independent and objective judgements.
An independent director has a fiduciary obligation and an obligation of diligence
toward the listed company and all its shareholders. An independent director should
safeguard the company’s overall interests and, in particular, the lawful rights and interests
of minority shareholders. An independent director should perform his duties and
responsibilities independently, without interference from the main shareholders or actual
controllers, or other entities or individuals that have a material interest in the listed
company.
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5.2.5.1.2 The quantity and independent standard of independent directors
The Guiding Opinion requires that at least one-third of the members of the board of
directors should be independent directors, and at least one of the independent directors
should be a professional accountant.
In order to ensure that independent directors be truly independent, the Guiding
Opinion stipulates that the following persons may not hold the position of independent
director: persons holding a position in the listed company or a subsidiary thereof and their
lineal relatives and major social relations (the term “lineal relatives” meaning spouses,
parents, children, and the term “major social relations” meaning siblings, parents-in-law,
children-in-law, siblings’ spouses, spouse’s siblings); individual shareholders who
directly or indirectly hold not less than 1% of the issued shares of the listed company or
who rank in the top ten shareholders of the listed company, and their lineal relatives;
persons who hold positions in entities that directly or indirectly hold not less than 5% of
the issued shares of the listed company or that rank in the top five shareholders of the
listed company, and their lineal relatives; persons who, at some time in the previous year,
have joined one of the three above categories ; persons who provide financial, legal,
consultancy or similar services to the listed company or its subsidiaries.
5.2.5.1.3 Independent directors’ special functions and powers
In the Guiding Opinion, independent directors are clearly required to safeguard the
company’s overall interests and, in particular, to ensure that the lawful rights and interests
of minority shareholders are not prejudiced. Listed companies should grant independent
directors a number of other tasks and powers, in addition to their legal functions and
powers. Once independent directors have approved a major transaction, they should
submit their decisions to the board of directors for deliberation. Before pronouncing their
decision, independent directors may engage an intermediary organization to issue an
independent financial report for use as a basis for their judgement. They should submit
their decisions to the board when they propose the engagement or dismissal of an
accounting firm, convene a meeting or an extraordinary shareholders’ general meeting,
engage external auditing institutions and consultancies or openly solicit shareholders’
voting rights before a shareholders’ general meeting.
Independent directors should obtain the consent of at least half their number before
exercising the afore-mentioned functions and powers. If any of the aforementioned
proposals are not accepted or any of the afore-mentioned functions and powers could not
be exercised normally, the listed company should disclose the details thereof.
An independent director should express his or her independent opinion on six
categories of significant matters such as the nomination, appointment and removal of
directors, the engagement or dismissal of executives. Independent opinions can be
expressed by agreement; reservation and reasons; objection and reasons; no comments
and obstacles. The listed company should make a public announcement of the above
independent opinions. If the independent directors fail to reach a consensus in their
opinions, the listed company should disclose each of the independent directors’ respective
opinions.
According to the provisions of the Guiding Opinion on the Establishment of
Independent Director Systems by Listed Companies, listed companies should provide the
necessary conditions to ensure the effective performance of functions and expression of
independent opinions by independent directors. Firstly, listed companies should make
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sure that their independent directors enjoy the same rights to information as other
directors. On all matters to be decided upon by the board of directors, the law requires
that a listed company must inform its independent directors in advance and provide them
with sufficient materials at the same time. Independent directors may request extra
materials when they find them insufficient. Secondly, the secretary of the board of
directors should actively brief the independent directors on the relevant situation and
provide materials. Meanwhile, other personnel of the listed company should actively
support the independent directors in their performance of duty. Thirdly, independent
directors may hire intermediary institutions and solicit opinions from independent
external consultants, the cost of which shall be borne by the listed company, as are the
costs related to the performance of their functions.
5.2.5.2 Principle VI. E. 2: When committees of the board are established, their
mandate, composition and working procedures should be well-defined and
disclosed by the board.
It is stipulated in the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies that the
board of directors of a listed company may establish a corporate strategy committee, audit
committee, nomination committee, remuneration and appraisal committee and other
special committees in accordance with the resolutions of the shareholders’ meetings. The
Code gives clear descriptions of the functions of special committees. Article 58 stipulates
that each special committee shall be accountable to the board of directors. All proposals
by special committees shall be submitted to the board of directors for review and
approval.
Article 52 stipulates that all committees shall be composed solely of directors.
Independent directors shall chair the audit committee, the nomination committee and the
remuneration and appraisal committee, and independent directors shall constitute the
majority of the committees. At least one independent director from the audit committee
shall be an accounting professional.
5.2.5.3 Principle VI. E. 3: Board and supervisory board members should be able
to commit themselves effectively to their responsibilities.
5.2.5.3.1 Training of the members of the board of directors and the supervisory
board.
The CSRC has issued a number of regulations related to the training of members of
the board, such as Guidance for the Training of Senior Managerial Personnel in a Listed
Company, Implementing Regulations on the Training of the Board Chairman and General
Manager in a Listed Company, Implementing Regulations on the Training of Directors
and Supervisors in a Listed Company, Implementing Regulations on the Training of
Independent Directors in a Listed Company and Implementing Regulations on the
Training of Board Secretaries in a Listed Company.
Article 4 of Guidance for the Training of Senior Managerial Personnel in a Listed
Company stipulates that executives of a listed company shall accept the ongoing
education and training, and obtain a training certificate when they hold their positions.
The Department of Listed Company Supervision of the CSRC provides guidance and
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coordination for the training, and organises training in collaboration with CSRC agencies
and stock exchanges. The trainees include the chairman of the board of directors,
directors, supervisors, independent directors, general managers, chief financial officers
and secretary of the board of directors. The training is designed for these senior
executives to gain a better understanding of the relevant laws and regulations and the
securities market, improve their business level, strengthen awareness of self-discipline
and standard operations and improve the corporate governance structure of listed
companies. Trainers are professionals from the CSRC, stock exchanges, higher education
institutions and other professional institutions. The CSRC records the training for listed
companies executives and their training examination results into a credit records
database.
5.2.5.3.2 The qualification of directors and supervisors
To ensure that the company directors and supervisors are able to effectively exercise
their functions and duties, the laws and regulations in China include a series of
regulations on the qualification of the board members.
Article 95 of the Guidance for the Articles of Association of Listed Companies
stipulates that a person may not act as a director if: they are without civil capacity or with
limited civil capacity; they have been sentenced to prison for embezzlement, bribery,
conversion of property, misappropriation of property, sabotage of social economic order,
and completed the sentence less than five years earlier; they have been deprived of
political rights as a result of a criminal conviction, and completed repaying the sanction
less than five years earlier; they have served as a director, factory manager, or the
manager of a company which went bankrupt as a result of mismanagement, were
personally responsible for the bankruptcy, and completed the liquidation less than three
years ago; they have served as the legal representative of a company whose business
license was revoked due to a violation of the law, were personally responsible for such
revocation, which occurred less than three years ago; they have an unpaid personal debt
of a significant amount; they have been banned by the CSRC from access to the securities
market and the ban has not expired. Article 135 provides that the stipulations on
disqualifications of directors also apply to supervisors. The directors, general manager
and other senior executives may not concurrently serve on the supervisory board.
Article 23 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that
in the case where a member of a controlling shareholder’s senior management
concurrently holds the position of director of the listed company, he or she shall ensure
adequate time and energy to perform the work required by the listed company. Article 52
stipulates that an independent director shall chair the audit committee, the nomination
committee and the remuneration and appraisal committee, and independent directors shall
constitute the majority of the committees. At least one independent director from the
audit committee shall be an accounting professional. Article 64 provides that supervisors
shall have professional knowledge or work experience in areas such as law and
accounting, and that the members and the structure of the supervisory board shall ensure
its capability to independently and efficiently supervise its directors, managers and other
senior management personnel and supervise and examine the company’s financial
matters.
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5.2.5.3.3 Laws and regulations provide constitutional protection for the board of
directors and the supervisory board to effectively fulfil their duties
A series of laws, regulations and self-disciplinary rules such as the Company Law,
Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies, Guidance for the Articles of
Association of Listed Companies, Shanghai Stock Exchange Guidance on Appointment
and Activities of Directors of Listed Companies, Shenzhen Stock Exchange Small and
Medium Enterprise Board Director Conduction Guidance, Shenzhen Stock Exchange
Guidance on Standard Operations of Companies Listed on the Main Board, Shenzhen
Stock Exchange Guidance on Standard Operations of Companies Listed on the SME
Board and Shenzhen Stock Exchange Guidance on Standard Operations of Companies
Listed on Growth Enterprise Board define the responsibilities and duties of the members
of the board of directors and the supervisory board, ensuring the performance of functions
by the two boards in accordance with the laws.
5.2.6 Principle VI. F: In order to fulfil their responsibilities, directors and
supervisors should have access to accurate, relevant and timely information.
5.2.6.1 The audit committee is responsible for the accuracy of corporate financial
information
Article 52 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that
at least one independent director from the audit committee should be an accounting
professional. Article 54 stipulates that the main duties of the audit committee are to
inspect the company’s financial information, disclose that information and monitor the
company’s internal control system to ensure that the board of directors obtains the correct
financial information. The audit committee is a special committee of the board of
directors. The expertise of its personnel and the inspection of the internal control system,
including the financial system, ensure that directors may obtain correct information.
5.2.6.2 Timely and adequate information for directors and supervisors
Article 46 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that
the meetings of the board of directors of a listed company shall be conducted in strict
compliance with the prescribed procedures. The board of directors shall send a notice to
all directors in advance, at the stipulated time, and shall provide sufficient material,
including relevant background material for the items on the agenda and other information
and data that may assist the directors in their understanding of the company’s business
development. When two or more independent directors deem the materials inadequate or
unclear, they may jointly submit a written request to postpone the meeting or to postpone
the discussion of the related matter, which shall be granted by the board of directors.
Article 61 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies provides that a
listed company shall adopt measures to ensure supervisors’ rights to learn about company
matters, and shall provide the necessary assistance to supervisors for their normal
performance of duties. Article 61 insists that no one shall interfere with or obstruct the
supervisors’ work and that a supervisor’s reasonable expenses necessary to perform the
duties shall be borne by the listed company. According to Articles 65 to 67 of the Code, a
listed company shall formulate in its articles of association standardised rules and
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procedures for the supervisory board and the supervisory board’s meetings shall be
convened in strict compliance with the rules and procedures. The supervisory board shall
meet periodically and shall convene interim meetings in a timely manner when necessary.
If for any reason a supervisory board meeting cannot be convened as scheduled, an
explanation shall be made publicly. The supervisory board may ask directors, managers
and other senior management personnel, internal and external auditors to attend the
supervisory board meetings and to answer the questions that the supervisory board is
concerned with.
5.2.6.3 Hiring of external experts for professional opinions
Article 57 of the Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies stipulates that
each special committee may engage intermediaries to provide professional opinions, and
the relevant expenses shall be borne by the company. Article 60 provides that supervisors
shall have the right to learn about the operating status of the listed company and the
corresponding obligation of confidentiality and that the supervisory board may
independently hire intermediary institutions to provide professional opinions.
Independent directors should provide objective and fair opinions, especially when the
company decision is controlled by internal personnel or there are conflicts of interest with
controlling shareholders. In this connection, the independent directors of many listed
companies have hired external independent advisors such as professional appraisers,
auditors, financial advisors and consultants. In order to allow independent directors to
play their role to the full and perform their duty, and protect the rights and interests of
minority shareholders, the Guiding Opinion on the Establishment of Independent Director
Systems by Listed Companies provides that a listed company should grant its independent
directors the power to independently hire external auditing and consulting agencies and to
make proposals to the board of directors on the hiring or firing of accounting firms.
Article 13 of the Guidance for Shanghai Exchange Listed Company Corporate
Governance stipulates that independent directors shall provide objective and fair
opinions, and especially when the company decision is controlled by internal personnel,
and that there are conflicts of interest among shareholders, independent directors may
consult external independent advisors. The company shall provide the necessary
conditions for this. Article 21 stipulates that the board of the company shall designate the
independent director to judge whether the related-party transaction is good for the
company in terms of objective standards. When necessary, professional appraisers and
independent financial advisors may be employed.
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Chapter 6
Stakeholders and corporate social responsibility
After the Chinese government released the Scientific Outlook on Development which
puts people’s interests first and stresses an all-round, balanced and sustainable
development model, and defined the strategic mission of building a harmonious socialist
society, Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has drawn increasing attention from
different sectors across the country. This indicates a crucial transformation in China’s
development model, a shift from a one-sided focus on the economic growth rate to a
scientific development model that stresses balance among economic, social and
environmental development and sustainable growth. At the micro-economic level, instead
of maximising shareholders’ interests alone, companies now take a more holistic view of
how their decisions and actions might affect stakeholders and make compensation or
repayments accordingly. They have begun to undertake varied forms of social
responsibilities across economic, legal, moral and charity issues, resulting in a beneficial
interaction with stakeholders and an internal and external environment favourable to their
own long-term operations.
Respecting the legal rights and interests of stakeholders, protecting the environment
and delivering social responsibility have become a code of conduct for businesses in
China. Listed companies, deemed the best among them, have achieved certain progress in
CSR enforcement.
6.1 China’s legal guarantee for the protection of stakeholder interests
CSR is both an obligation that businesses undertake to account for social
communities and stakeholders and a right that social communities and stakeholders are
entitled to assert to businesses. A scientific and comprehensive legal system is
instrumental for CSR enforcement and to protect the legal rights and interests of
stakeholders. Laws and regulations in China contain compulsory provisions on certain
fundamental and instrumental CSR issues. A wide range of standards is also in place,
including standards for environmental protection, product quality, a minimum wage and
workplace safety. Penalties for violation of CSR obligations are defined, including forced
closure, revocation of business licences, compensation for economic loss and execution
of criminal liability. All this has made the businesses feel more responsible for CSR
enforcement.
There are also certain specially designed provisions that provide taxation, credit and
other policy incentives for CSR enforcement. For instance, the Income Tax Law provides
that businesses engaged in approved environmental protection and water or energy
conservation projects are entitled to income tax reductions or exemptions. Meanwhile, the
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purchasing costs of facilities for the purposes of environmental protection, water or
energy conservation, and workplace safety are subject to certain tax allowances.
Stakeholders’ participation in CSR and protection of their own interests are also
written into China’s laws and regulations. For instance, under the Company Law, staff
representatives are allowed to participate in meetings of board directors and supervisors,
and in specific circumstances decisions on major events shall be approved by creditors’
meetings.
6.1.1 Provisions on protection of stakeholders’ interests
6.1.1.1 Provisions on protection of creditors’ interests
Debt financing always accounts for a high percentage of the capital structure of
Chinese businesses. It takes the form of short-term loans, short-term financing bills, long-
term loans, corporate bonds and convertible corporate bonds. Mechanisms that protect
creditors’ interests are defined in the Company Law, the Law on Commercial Banks, the
Securities Law and the Law on Enterprise Bankruptcy.
The Company Law bans shareholders from abusing independent entities with legal
personality status and their limited responsibilities to the detriment of creditors’ interests.
Those who do so and evade debt obligations to the serious detriment of creditors’
interests shall assume collateral responsibility to respond to the creditors. The company
shall cover its previous losses and make allocations to the statutory reserve funds before
distributing profits to shareholders. Otherwise shareholders shall return to the company
the profit shared in violation of the above provision.
The Law also provides that in the case of a merger, division or registered capital
reduction, the company shall prepare a balance sheet and property list and notify its
creditors within ten days of the adoption of the resolution and publish a notice within 30
days. Upon receiving the notice, creditors are entitled to protective measures such as
claiming full debt payment or requiring assurance of payments from the company.
The Law also provides that a liquidation committee shall be formed within 15 days
after the date of the dissolution decision. The committee shall notify the creditors within
ten days of its establishment and make a public announcement in the newspaper within 60
days. Creditors may file for their rights with the committee after receipt of the notice. The
company shall pay off liquidation expenses, employee payments, insurance fees, statutory
compensation and unpaid tax and debts before distributing remaining assets to
shareholders.
In 2003 and 2005 the General Office of the State Council issued two documents
produced by the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission on
standardising the ownership reform of SOEs, which clearly provides that the reform must
explicitly maintain financial creditors’ rights and materialise financial debts according to
law, and that the reform plan should be agreed upon by the financial institution creditors.
The Law on Enterprise Bankruptcy adopted in August 2006 sets out regulations for
bankruptcy procedures and the settlement of creditors’ rights and obligations. According
to the Law, if the company fails to pay off mature debts and has insufficient assets to pay
off total debt or evidently lacks the ability to do so, either the debtor or creditor may file
for bankruptcy settlement with the People’s Court. Article 84 of the Code of Corporate
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Governance of Listed Companies provides that listed companies shall provide the
required information to the bank and its debtors for them to make judgements and
decisions on the company’s operational status and financial situation. The creditors are
entitled to the right to know as necessary.
6.1.1.2 Protection of employee rights
With the growing trend to strive to protect human rights and ensure people’s
livelihood, the Chinese government has stepped up legislative efforts on the protection of
employee rights. A number of laws and regulations have been developed and amended,
including the Company Law, Labour Law, Law on Employment Contracts, Employment
Promotion Law, Production Safety Law, Law on Prevention and Control of Occupational
Diseases and Regulation on the Collection and Payment of Social Insurance Premiums.
The system that protects employees’ rights in fair employment opportunity, health and
safety, payments and social insurance has gradually been improved. Under the Company
Law, companies are required to protect the legal rights and interests of their employees by
signing work contracts with them, participating in social insurance, and adopting more
protective measures for workplace safety. Companies are also required to provide more
professional education and training in different forms to enhance employees’
qualifications.
In China, employees are allowed to participate in the management of their company
through trade unions, the board of directors, the board of supervisors and the employee
representative conference. Article 18 of the Company Law allows employees to organise
trade unions and requires the company to provide operational means for trade union
activities. Trade union representatives shall sign a collective contract with the company
on issues of payments, working hours, pensions, insurance and workplace safety. In the
case of major decisions on reorganisation and operations, and key regulations, the
company shall listen to the voice of the trade union and collect views and advice from
employees through the employee representative congress or in other forms. Article 4 of
the Law on Employment Contracts provides that when an employer draws up, revises or
decides on rules and regulations or material matters that have a direct bearing on the
immediate interests of its employees, such as those concerning compensation, working
hours, breaks and leave, workplace safety and hygiene, insurance and benefits, employee
training, work discipline or work quota management, these shall all be discussed by the
employee representative congress or all the employees. The employee representative
congress or all the employees, as the case may be, shall put forward a proposal and
comments, whereupon the matter shall be determined through consultations with the trade
union or employee representatives conducted on a basis of equality. The Company Law
allows for the presence of employee representatives at board meetings and requires a
minimum one-third share of employee representatives on the board of supervisors.
Employee representatives are to be selected by means of democratic elections through the
employee representative congress, the employee congress or other forms. The Law on
Enterprise Bankruptcy requires the presence and opinions of employees and trade union
representatives at the debtors’ meeting if the company enters a bankruptcy reorganisation
phase.
The Law on Employment Promotion adopted in August 2007 provides for the right of
equal employment opportunities.
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6.1.1.3 Regulations on consumer rights protection
China released a great number of laws and regulations on the protection of consumer
rights and interests with a view to protecting them and maintaining a proper market order.
These include provisions on the social responsibilities that businesses are required to
assume for consumers. Directly related laws and regulations are the Law on the
Protection of the Rights and Interests of Consumers, Measures to Handle Fraudulent
Behaviours against Consumers, Penalties on Fraudulent Behaviours against Consumers,
Interim Measures on Consumer Complaints Handled by Business and Commerce
Administrative Authorities. Laws on product quality include the Law on Product Quality,
Law on Food Safety and Pharmaceutical Administration Law.
6.1.2 Laws and regulations on CSR enforcement
The Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies provides that while
ensuring sustained growth and maximum shareholder interests, listed companies shall
also be committed to community welfare, environmental protection and charity issues and
be focused on their own social responsibilities. Other laws and regulations also contain
detailed provisions on the enforcement of CSR.
6.1.2.1 Provisions on Environmental Protection
According to the Measures for the Administration of Initial Public Offerings of
Shares and the Listing Thereof and Administrative Measures for the Issuance of
Securities by Listed Companies released by the CSRC, companies that have violated laws
and administrative regulations on environmental protection within the recent 36 months
and were subject to administrative penalties with serious circumstances shall not be
allowed to apply for initial public offerings. Listed companies shall not engage in re-
financing. Listed companies’ initial public offerings and new share issues shall also meet
regulations on environmental protection.
The State Administration on Environmental Protection (SEPA) issued the Measures
on Environmental Information Publicity (on Trial) in 2007, encouraging businesses to
disclose their own environmental information on a voluntary basis. The 2008 SEPA
Guiding Opinion on Strengthening the Regulatory Work on Listed Companies in Respect
of Environmental Protection provides that listed companies shall immediately disclose to
investors who have no prior knowledge major events with potential substantial impacts
on the transaction price of securities and derivatives, and relevance to environmental
protection, illustrating the cause, status quo and possible impacts of the event. In 2008,
the Shanghai Stock Exchange issued the Guidelines on the Disclosure of Environmental
Information of Listed Companies, clarifying the compulsory disclosure requirements for
listed companies that appear on the government list of “most seriously polluted
companies” or have experienced major environmental events, and the requirements of
voluntary disclosure.
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6.1.2.2 Regulations against corruption and bribery among businesses
Under the Law against Unfair Competition published in 1993, companies are required
to observe the principle of voluntariness, equality, justice, honesty and integrity and the
agreed commercial morals. In 1996, the Interim Provision on Banning Commercial
Bribery was published by the State Administration for Industry and Commerce. In 2005,
China joined the United Nations Convention against Corruption and has enhanced
international co-operation against corruption. The Criminal Law also defines severe
criminal punishments of bribery.
6.1.2.3 Regulations on Donations to Charity
The Welfare Donations Law was issued in 1999, proving for donations to charities by
individuals, businesses and other organisations. These charity actions include community
and individual activities such as disaster relief, poverty relief and reduction and assistance
for the disabled; facility-building projects for education, science, culture, healthcare,
sports, environmental protection and communities; and non-profit public and welfare
activities for the benefit of social progress.
Based on the latest Corporate Income Tax Law amended and released in 2007, the
proportion of charity and welfare expenses that is within 12% of annual profits shall be
deducted from tax payments.
6.2 China’s practices compared with the OECD principles
6.2.1 Principle IV. A: The rights of stakeholders that are established by law or
through mutual agreements are to be respected.
The principle provisions on the basic content and form of CSR delivery within
China’s laws and regulations, lay down the legal basis for CSR. Article 5 of the Company
Law provides that “when undertaking business operations, a company shall comply with
the laws and administrative regulations, social morality and business morality. It shall act
in good faith, accept the supervision of the government and the general public, and bear
social responsibilities”. The Code of Corporate Governance of Listed Companies
stipulates that listed companies shall respect the legal rights of stakeholders such as
banks, creditors, employees, consumers, suppliers and communities; create conditions as
required for the maintenance of such rights and interests; and arrange compensation
which the stakeholders shall have access to and the opportunity to receive whenever their
legitimate interests are violated. Apart from legal provisions, the Shanghai and Shenzhen
Stock Exchanges have actively played their role as the supervisors of listed companies’
self-discipline and made great efforts in to make it easier for listed companies to protect
stakeholder interests and fulfil their social responsibilities to the full.
In 2006, the Shenzhen Stock Exchange released the Guidelines on Social
Responsibilities of Companies Listed at the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, under which listed
companies are required to actively protect the legitimate rights and interests of debtors
and employees while pursuing economic benefits and protecting shareholder interests;
treat suppliers, customers and consumers with good faith; take an active part in
environmental protection, community development and other public causes; and develop
a balanced and harmonious relationship with the communities. Listed companies are
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encouraged to develop social responsibility systems, conduct regular inspection and
assessment of the progress made in implementing the systems and issues to be addressed,
and regularly draft and release reports on social responsibilities. The TEDA
Environmental Protection Index, the first index on social responsibility on China’s capital
market, was launched by Shenzhen Securities Information Company, a subsidiary of the
Shenzhen Stock Exchange.
In 2008, the Notice on Enhancing CSR Requirements for Listed Companies was
issued by the Shanghai Stock Exchange, which emphasises the non-commercial
contribution by stakeholders, society, environmental protection and resource uses. While
setting up a CSR strategy, programme and working mechanism, a listed company is
encouraged to disclose its special practices and achievements in CSR delivery and release
its annual CSR report along with its annual report. It is also encouraged to make public its
social contribution value per share, which is the equivalent of additional value per share
calculated on the basis of profits per share with the addition of values created for
stakeholders including the annual taxes to the country, payments to employees, loan
interests to banks or other creditors, and external donations, and the deduction of
environmental pollution costs and other forms of social costs. It is designed to give the
public a more comprehensive picture of the real value that businesses can create for their
shareholders, employees, clients, creditors, communities, and society as a whole. In
August 2009, the Shanghai Stock Exchange and China Securities Index Company jointly
launched the SSE Social Responsibility Index, which selects from the sample stocks 100
corporate stocks with the highest social contribution value per share and puts them into
new sample stocks.
6.2.2 Principle IV. B: Where stakeholder interests are protected by law,
stakeholders should have the opportunity to obtain effective redress for violation
of their rights.
6.2.2.1 Compensation mechanism for creditors with damaged interests
First, Article 20 of the Company Law provides for the denial of the company’s legal
personality status. In other words, where a shareholder of a company evades the payment
of its debts by abusing the independent status of legal personality or the shareholder’s
limited liabilities, and thus seriously damages the interests of any creditor, it shall bear
joint liabilities for company debts. Where any shareholder attempts to transfer or possess
the company’s property by abusing shareholders’ rights, the creditors may demand debt
liabilities to be answered for.
Second, creditors may execute their rights of guarantee. The Guarantee Law provides
that in economic activities such as borrowing, buying and selling, transporting goods,
possessing and outsourcing, creditors may initiate a guaranty by way of assurance,
mortgage, pledge, lien or down-payment to ensure the fulfilment of their rights as
debtors.
Third, creditors may exercise subrogation rights. Article 73 of the Contract Law
provides that if the debtor delays in exercising its creditor’s right against a third person,
thereby harming the creditor, the creditor may petition the People’s Court for subrogation
and the necessary expenses for subrogation by the creditor shall be borne by the debtor.
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Fourth, creditors may petition the court to cancel debtors’ behaviour of handling
abnormal assets. Article 74 of the Contract Law provides that where the debtor waives its
creditor’s right against a third party or assigns its property without reward, thereby
harming the creditor’s interests, the creditor may petition the People’s Court for
cancellation of the debtor’s act. Where the debtor assigns its property at a low price
which is manifestly unreasonable, thereby harming the creditor’s interests, and the
assignee is aware of the situation, the creditor may also petition the People’s Court for
cancellation of the debtor’s act. The expenses necessary for the creditor to exercise the
right to cancel shall be borne by the debtor.
Fifth, debtors may initiate a civil litigation at the Court based on the provisions of the
Civil Procedure Law. Before or during the process of litigation, debtors may apply for
protective measures such as closure, seizure and asset freezing.
6.2.2.2 Settlement mechanism for labour disputes
According to the Labour Law, Trade Union Law and the Law on Mediation and
Arbitration of Labour Disputes, labour disputes between employees and employers may
be resolved by filing applications for mediation or arbitration, initiating litigation, or
through consultation.
In the case of bankruptcy liquidation, the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law provides that
bankruptcy property shall first be applied for repayments of wage arrears, healthcare, and
subsidies for disabled people and survivor pension. The repayments shall be assigned into
employees’ pension insurance, health insurance and other forms of compensation before
being applied to repay other insurance expenses, taxation and ordinary bankruptcy
credits.
6.2.2.3 Settlement mechanism for consumer rights disputes
The Law on the Protection of Consumer Rights and Interests provides that consumer
rights disputes between consumers and businesses may be settled peacefully through
consultation, filing for mediation by a consumer association, filing a complaint with
authorities in charge, applying for arbitration and initiating litigation with the court. If the
health or property of consumers or other victims suffer from goods defects, they may
demand compensation from the sellers and producers. The Measures against Deceptive
Behaviour against Consumers released by the State Administration for Industry and
Commerce in 1996 provides that where fraud is found in goods or services, sellers shall
provide additional compensation to make up for the consumer losses of the consumers;
the compensation value shall be the same as the purchasing price of the goods or twice
the service charge.
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6.2.3 Principle IV. C: Performance-enhancing mechanisms for employee
participation should be allowed to develop.
6.2.3.1 Means of employee participation in corporate governance
Employees in China can access the management and operation of their companies in
different ways. They can be elected into the board of directors or as members of the board
of supervisors. The board of supervisors shall have a minimum of one-third of employee
representatives. Employees are entitled to a range of rights such as examining the
company’s financial situation, supervising the behaviours of directors and senior
management in delivering their duties, and raising proposals at the shareholders’
meetings. The trade union, as an important organisation in the protection of employees’
legal rights, also plays a major role in the enforcement of employees’ democratic rights,
providing guidance to employees on signing collective contracts with the employer and
overseeing the enforcement of labour-related laws and regulations by the companies.
6.2.3.2 Employees shall be allowed to be widely engaged in the equity incentive
program.
The Measures for the Administration of the Equity Incentives of Listed Companies
(Trial Implementation) provides that board directors, senior management, core
technological (business) professionals and other employees may benefit from these
incentives.
6.2.4 Principle IV. D: Stakeholders should have access to relevant, sufficient
and reliable information on a timely and regular basis.
Strict requirements on information disclosure by listed companies can be found in a
range of laws, regulations and self-disciplinary rules such as the Securities Law,
Administrative Measures on Information Disclosure of Listed Companies and the Listing
Rules of the Stock Exchange. Regular and ad hoc reports released by listed companies are
published on websites designated by CSRC and one or more nationwide securities
newspapers as free public resources. All stakeholders can read this information in real-
time and free of charge.
They may also learn from the CSR Report issued by listed companies about what has
been done to protect employee rights and interests, guarantee product safety, and in the
areas of environmental protection, charity and welfare. As required by the Notice on
Producing a Proper Annual Report in 2008 by the Listed Companies, listed companies
that are on Shenzhen Securities 100 Index shall follow the regulation in the Guidance on
Social Responsibilities of Listed Companies to disclose social responsibility reports along
with the disclosure of their 2008 annual reports, while encouraging other listed companies
to disclose similar reports. In the Notice on 2008 Annual Reports of Listed Companies,
SSE sample companies, companies with overseas foreign investment offerings, and
financial companies shall disclose CSR reports and encourage other listed companies to
do so when conditions are ready.
It is estimated that for 2008 162 listed companies in Shenzhen and 290 in Shanghai
disclosed their reports.
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6.2.5 Principle IV. E Stakeholders should be able to freely communicate their
concerns about illegal or unethical practices to the board and their rights
should not be compromised because of this.
An important issue in corporate internal control is the possibility for stakeholders to
file a complaint with competent institutions within the company regarding illegal or
unethical practices existing therein. Basic Norms on Corporate Internal Control sets out
four basic requirements:
6.2.5.1 Information on internal control shall be sent to different management
levels, competent offices and business sections, and shall be communicated to
external investors, creditors, customers, suppliers, intermediaries and supervisors
requesting their feedback. Issues identified in this way shall be reported and
addressed immediately. Key information shall be transmitted to the board of
directors, the board of supervisors and management immediately.
6.2.5.2 An anti-fraud mechanism shall be put in place. The principle of
punishment and prevention with the focus on prevention shall be adhered to. Key
areas, links and institutional obligations shall be clearly defined. Procedures for
whistle-blowers, investigation, settlement, reporting and remedies shall be
standardised.
6.2.5.3. Systems for whistle-blowing and complaints against and the protection of
whistle-blowers shall be put in place. A hot line shall be set up. Handling
procedure, time limits and settlement requirements shall be clearly defined to
ensure that whistle-blowing and complaints are important means of information-
gathering. The abovementioned systems shall be made known to all employees in
a timely manner.
6.2.5.4 Self-assessments on the validity of internal control shall be conducted on a
regular basis in line with the progress of internal supervision, and reports made
accordingly.
The presence of an internal auditing institution is also required for listed companies in
China. Directly accountable to the board of directors or the auditing committee, this body
is supported by full-time auditors to oversee whether internal control is set up and
delivered to the full. When internal or external auditors identify major defects on the
internal control of complaints-handling, relevant information shall be reported and
communicated to management, the auditing committee and board of directors.
While sending in its IPO application papers to the CSRC, the company shall submit a
report confirming the validity of the internal control prepared by certified accountants,
who verify that the internal control system is sound, effectively implemented and can
ensure the reliability of its financial statements, legitimacy of the company’s operations
and manufacturing activities and their efficiency and effects. Rules on the Content and
Format of Annual Reports encourage all listed companies controlled by state-owned
enterprises, in the financial sector or otherwise qualified to disclose the self-assessment
report on internal control prepared by the board of directors and verified by the auditing
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authorities. In its Notice on Doing a Good Job on 2008 Annual Reports by Listed
Companies, the Shanghai Stock Exchange requires that sample companies on the SSE
corporate governance board, companies that issue foreign shares listed aboard and
financial companies disclose the self-evaluation reports by their boards of directors, while
disclosing the 2008 annual reports. This encourages other viable listed companies to
disclose their internal control reports at the same time as their 2008 annual reports, and
encourages listed companies to engage audit firms to check and appraise their internal
control. The auditor’s opinion on such appraisal should also be disclosed. The Guidance
on Internal Control of Companies Listed on the SME Board requires the companies listed
on the small business board to put out a self-assessment report on internal control on an
annual basis and the accounting firm to present a verification report on the validity of the
report every other year. No. 1141 of the Auditing Rules of Certified Accountants—
Considerations of Bribery in the Auditing of Financial Statements provides that whenever
a certified accountant notices, during the auditing process, major defects in the design or
implementation of the company’s internal control system, originally designed to prevent
or identify bribery, he or she shall inform the management at the appropriate level.
6.2.6 Principle IV. F: The corporate governance framework should be
complemented by an effective, efficient insolvency framework and by effective
enforcement of creditor rights.
The Company Law and the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law constitute the fundamental
legal framework for corporate insolvency. The latter provides for the insolvency
procedure, the repayment of property and the basic rights of creditors, introduces the
system of bankruptcy managers, standardises the procedures of restructuring and
settlement, and ensures the transparency, efficiency and effects of insolvency. In this
process, the creditors have a large degree of autonomy. If the company is unable to repay
its mature debts, creditors may file applications for restructuring or bankruptcy with the
court. On the sidelines of the creditors’ meeting, the company is required to be present
and answer questions from the creditors. In the selection and overseeing of managers, if
the creditors’ meeting views the manager unable to perform their duty in a lawful and fair
way, or for other reasons, it can apply for a change at the court. While performing their
duties, managers are likely to be overseen by the creditors’ meeting and creditors’
committee. In the reorganisation procedure, creditors may file a direct application with
the court, and the creditors’ meeting has the right to vote on the draft reorganisation
programme, which is subject to a group voting by creditors of different types. Under the
Company Law and Enterprise Bankruptcy law, creditors are entitled to participate in
bankruptcy liquidation procedures and in the mechanism of active protection of their own
legal rights and interests.
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OECD-China Policy Dialogue on Corporate Governance
Corporate Governance of Listed Companies
in China
SELF-ASSESSMENT BY THE CHINA SECURITIES REGULATORY
COMMISSION
This report looks at the institutional framework of corporate governance in China through the prism of the
OECD Principles of Corporate Governance and is a product of the ongoing OECD-China Policy Dialogue on
Corporate Governance. By assessing a broad range of laws, regulations and codes, it provides a valuable
reference for understanding how much has been achieved in Chinese corporate governance and the main
ambitions of future reform efforts.
The report shows that corporate governance has improved signifi cantly since the Chinese stock market
was created in 1990, with important achievements in establishing and developing the legal and regulatory
framework. The OECD-China Self-Assessment represents a thorough review of all laws, regulations and codes
that relate to every principle recommended by the OECD Principles of Corporate Governance. It documents
the advances in the Chinese Corporate Governance framework. Building on this report, bilateral co-operation
between China and the OECD will continue to enhance the understanding of China’s corporate governance
system and how it impacts on company and investor behaviour.
Contents
Preface by Shang Fulin, Chairman, China Securities Regulatory Commission
Preface by Richard Boucher, Deputy Secretary-General, OECD
Chapter 1. The corporate governance framework in China
Chapter 2. Shareholders’ rights
Chapter 3. The equitable treatment of shareholders
Chapter 4. Information disclosure
Chapter 5. Board and supervisory board: responsibility and supervision
Chapter 6. Stakeholders and corporate social responsibility
ISBN 978-92-64-11908-6
26 2011 08 1 P -:HSTCQE=VV^U][:
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OECD-China Policy Dialogue
on Corporate Governance
Corporate Governance of
Listed Companies in China
SELF-ASSESSMENT BY THE CHINA SECURITIES
REGULATORY COMMISSION
Please cite this publication as:
OECD (2011), Corporate Governance of Listed Companies in China: Self-Assessment by the China Securities
Regulatory Commission, OECD Publishing.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264119208-en
This work is published on the OECD iLibrary, which gathers all OECD books, periodicals and statistical
databases. Visit www.oecd-ilibrary.org, and do not hesitate to contact us for more information.
- Foreword
- Preface by SHANG Fulin
Table of Contents
Preface by Richard Boucher
The corporate governance framework in China
The history and development of corporate governance in China
The legal framework of corporate governance for listed companies in China
Institutional framework for the corporate governance of listed companies in China
Notes
Shareholders’ rights
Introduction to shareholders’ rights
China’s practices compared with OECD principles
The equitable treatment of shareholders
Introduction to the equitable treatment of shareholders
China’s practices compared with OECD principles
Information disclosure
Introduction to information disclosure
China’s practices compared with OECD principles
Board and supervisory board: responsibility and supervision
Overview of the board of directors and supervisory board system in China
China’s practices compared with the OECD principles
Stakeholders and corporate social responsibility
China’s legal guarantee for the protection of stakeholder interests
China’s practices compared with the OECD principles