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LEGAL & ETHICAL ASPECTS OF GOVERNANCE

LEGAL & ETHICAL ASPECTS OF GOVERNANCE. Edward Chr Kieswetter SARS: Deputy Commissioner. PRESENTATION CONTENT. Law vs. Ethics 2. The Cost of Questionable Ethics Experiences from SARS Our Approach Our Experience Some Results 4. Conclusion. YOU MAY RECALL THAT IT WAS PERFECTLY LEGAL….

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LEGAL & ETHICAL ASPECTS OF GOVERNANCE

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  1. LEGAL & ETHICAL ASPECTS OF GOVERNANCE Edward Chr Kieswetter SARS: Deputy Commissioner

  2. PRESENTATION CONTENT • Law vs. Ethics 2. The Cost of Questionable Ethics • Experiences from SARS • Our Approach • Our Experience • Some Results 4. Conclusion

  3. YOU MAY RECALL THAT IT WASPERFECTLY LEGAL… • Slavery in the USA up to1865 • Women’s suffrage denied deep onto the 20th century in many “developed countries” • No German citizenship for German Jews up to about 60 years ago • Black South Africans denied the vote in their own country only 16 years ago …BUT IS IT RIGHT SIMPLY BECAUSE ITS LEGAL?

  4. EQUALLY… From a legal standpoint… • You have no obligation to stop a drunk from driving his car • A witness at the scene of a crime bear no responsibility to intervene • Johnson & Johnson did not have to withdraw 31 million bottles of Tylenol when 7 people died in1982 • You will not be prosecuted for allowing someone to drown, even if you could help …YET IN EACH INSTANCE IT WOULD BE CONSIDERED TO BE RIGHT/REQUIRED/EXPECTED TO DO SOMETHING!

  5. LIMITATIONS OF THE LAW In prescribing a set of generally accepted, widely published, and generally enforced rules, laws are meant to provide us with: • A broad framework for acceptable behaviour • Prescriptions on how to conduct specific relationships within society • A reference for holding individuals and groups accountable for social order YET LAWS, WHILST INDISPENSABLE, ARE NOT SUFFICIENT AS A COMLPETE REFERENCE TO GOVERN BEHAVIOUR!

  6. IN THE HIGHLY CONTESTED SPACE OFGOVERNMENTS, CIVIL SOCIETY AND BUSINESS • Where not everything which is allowed is necessarily right or good • Where narrow self interests are often pursued at the expense of greater social good • Where not every eventuality can be always fully anticipated • Where the eventual impact of leadership decisions may have far-reaching consequences beyond its immediacy LEGAL PRINCIPLES HAVE TO CO-EXIST WITH ETHICAL VALUES

  7. SO WHAT EXACTLY IS ETHICS?

  8. ETHICS…. • Greek derivative – ethos or character • Having, and acting on a sense of what is right • An awareness of consequences: intended, unintended, immediate, extended… • Doing the right thing, all the time, even when no-one is watching • One’s view on morality (mores –latin) informs what is ethical for you!

  9. LEADERSHIP ETHICS According to King III, Responsible Leadership that has an “ethical foundation”, is defined as leadership focused amongst other things on: • Building sustainable business • Considering the short and long term economic, societal and environmental impact of strategic choices • Considering impact of business on internal and external stakeholders NOT SIMPLY SHORT TERM BOTTOM-LINE RESULTS!

  10. A QUICK LOOK AT CONTEXT AND THE COST OF QUESTIONABLE ETHICS

  11. A QUEST FOR THE CORRECT MODEL “We must reject the idea – well intentioned, but dead wrong – that the primary path to greatness in social sectors is to become “more like a business.” Most businesses fall somewhere between mediocre and good. Few are great! Jim Collins, 2006

  12. EXAMPLES OF ORGANISATIONS WHERE QUESTIONS ABOUT LEADERSHIP ETHICS CAN BE ASKED • Enrons, Worldcoms, Parmalat, etc, • And on our doorstep • Leisurenet • Saambou • Fidentia • and many more examples of fraud, insider trading, colluding, price fixing, etc

  13. CAPITALISM vs CAPITALIST “Are we dealing with a crisis of capitalism or a crisis caused by capitalists? Sir Martin Sorrel (CEO: WPP) believes that a few misguided capitalists are to blame for the current financial crisis that precipitated the subsequent economic crisis in the world today – he singled out amongst chief contributory factors, the perverse incentives, for example of “pariah merchant bankers” Its about the greed of people!

  14. TAKING RISKS WITH OTHER PEOPLE’S MONEY Derivates are “financial weapons of mass destruction” says Warren Buffet, referring to the ceaseless financial sector innovation that has now led to the “deepest, broadest and most dangerous financial crisis since the 1930’s”

  15. PRUDENCE: CAPITAL/ASSET RATIOS European Banks: • 100 years ago – 4:1 • 1970’s – 10:1 • US leverage ratios 2002 – 2006: • Morgan Stanley 21 - 33 • Goldman Sachs 24 - 26 • Merrill Lynch 27 – 32 • Bear Sterns 32 - 34 In September 2008, the Bank of America’s leverage ratio was 73.7:1 HBR, July – Aug 2009

  16. EXAMPLE: THE COST OF AGGRESSIVE TAX PLANNING According to the Tax Justice Network: All the Development Funding to Africa can more than adequately be paid for by the monies that end up in elsewhere due to tax revenues that leave the continent as a result of aggressive tax planning and questionable tax havens In 2007 more than US$ 11.5 held in about 70 tax havens

  17. POSSIBLE RESPONSES? • Regulation: How much? • Government Intervention: Appropriate level? • Protectionism: Can it be justified? • Quick Fix vs. Sustainable Solutions? • Current “Fix” vs. Future “Cost”

  18. LETTER vs SPIRIT “I’ve lived my life in a society where there was no rule of law, and that’s a terrible existence. But a society where the rule of law is the only standard of ethical behaviour is equally bad” Kevin Rollins (President of Dell Computer Corporation paraphrasing Aleksander Solzhenitsyn)

  19. EXPERIENCES FROM THE SOUTH AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE

  20. SARS’ APPROACH TO ETHICAL LEADERSHIP WE EXPECT OF OURSELVES…. TO DO THE RIGHT THING ALL THE TIME EVEN IF NO ONE IS WATCHING

  21. ETHICAL LEADERSHIP IS ABOUT… • Building an effective corporate culture at SARS that is more than conforming to what is legal or as set out in the King recommendations • Ethical and moral standards go beyond the law and the language of ‘thou shall not’ • SARS duty arises out of respect for the worth and dignity of individuals who devote their energies to the organisation and depend on SARS for their economic wellbeing

  22. ETHICAL LEADERHIP IN PRACTICE Requires: • Absolute clarity about what values we want to promote at SARS • Relentlessly reinforcing behaviours that support our desired values • Visibly sanction behaviours that detract from our desired values • Fair & Consistent Enforcement

  23. CULTURE AND ETHICS • Whilst organizational structure, policies & procedures may help, it will not ensure a sustainable ethical environment. • There is a strong link between the organizational culture and ethics • You have to get it into the DNA!

  24. THE SARS EXPERIENCE Elaborating on the SARS experience • Our commitment to the public • Our commitment to our staff • Institutional arrangements • Some Results at a glance

  25. OUR COMMITMENT TO THE PUBLIC

  26. SARS PURPOSE STATEMENT We will contribute to South Africa’s developmentas a globally competitive economyby facilitating legitimatetrade, tax paymentand economic growthand by eliminating illegal tradeand tax evasion. We administer an efficient tax systemand reduce the compliance burdenby advocating the value of compliance and creating a culture of good citizenshipacross all sectors of society and the economy A successful South Africa will improve the prosperityof its people and that of Africa

  27. SARS THEORY OF COMPLIANCE • Rationale: Clarity & Simplicity • “The easier we make it for honest taxpayers to comply, and the earlier we detect non-compliance, the higher the levels of compliance is likely to be ” • We therefore aspire to: • Reach out and educate • Provide world-class service • Enforcement responsibly

  28. Service Charter You are entitled to expect SARS: To help you through • self-explanatory leaflets and booklets as well as our website • courteous and professional service at all times • providing clear, accurate and helpful responses • making clear what action you need to take and by when • being accessible via our call centre and walk-in centres • listening to your suggestions To be fair by • expecting you to pay only what is due under law • treating everyone equally • ensuring everyone pays their fair share To respect your constitutional rights and privacy by • keeping your private affairs strictly confidential • furnishing you with reasons for decisions taken • applying the law consistently and impartially If you are not satisfied, you may • request that your tax affairs be re-examined • exercise your right to object and appeal • request that we advise you of the procedures to be followed in our alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) process • lodge a formal complaint at any of our offices • lodge a complaint with the SARS Service Monitoring Office (SSMO) In return, your obligations are to • be honest • submit full and accurate information on time • pay your tax and/or duties on time and in full • encourage others to pay their tax and/or duties • report others who are not paying their fair share • not encourage or be party to bribery or fraud in any form

  29. OUTREACH TO TAXPAYERS

  30. BALANCE: SERVICE & ENFORCEMENT

  31. OUR COMMITMENT TO OUR STAFF

  32. SARS Leadership Model 32

  33. ADDRESSING DYSFUNCTIONAL ISSUES OR RESTRAINING FORCES THAT ACT AGAINST DRIVING FORCES FROM SARS MANAGEMENT You can not demand ethical behaviour until you deal with the basics Examples for us: • Dissatisfaction relating to Grades and Salaries • Career Development Program • Recruitment and Selection Practices • Level & Quality of Communication • Double Standards, mixed messages and inconsistent behaviour

  34. INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS

  35. STRUCTURE FOLLOWS STRATEGY SARS established an Ethics Officeat the end of 2004 comprising the following units: • Integrity Unit: pre-employment screening and security vetting • Ethics Awareness Unit: ethics training and advice to SARS personnel • Anti-Corruption Unit: eradicating fraud and corruption within the organization • Other Stakeholders: FIC, SARB, SAPS, NPA, etc

  36. LESSONS FOR ETHICAL LEADERSHIP

  37. SOME TELL−TALE SIGNS OF UNETHICAL LEADERSHIP BEHAVIOUR • Power-driven people • Pursuit of narrow self-interest • Nepotistic behaviour • Discourage open and challenging conversations • Focus on short term gain at the expense of long term integrity

  38. IN SUMMARY • Clear ethical expectations • Leadership visibility & behaviour • Substantive ethical training • Vigilance & Relentless monitoring • Visible rewards and sanctions • Create a Safe environment – for frank conversation, for bad news, for learning

  39. ETHICS CANNOT BE ROLE PLAYED! Ethics in fact is: • More than “leadership saying” • More than “leadership doing” • It is about “leadership being”

  40. SOME RESULTS AT A GLANCE

  41. STRIVING FOR SERVICE EXCELLENCE Introduction of Electronic Filing 41 41

  42. Pre-populated PIT form achieved Customer satisfaction rating of 86.9% Paper return volumes declined by 74% Average turnaround of PIT assessments from 1% within 48 hours to 63% within 24 hours STRIVING FOR SERVICE EXCELLENCE 42

  43. TOWARDS A CULTURE OF VOLUNTARY COMPLIANCE 31% improvement on PAYE submissions 518 guilty verdicts attained 73k audits - average yield of ~R70k per case R13.4b debt collected last year 43

  44. TAX REGISTER GROWTH 7.0 Registered tax payers as % of population CAGR ~7.6% 28,0 18,0 16,8 1995/96 2000/01 2005/06

  45. Revenue Revenue growth from R184b to R625b over past 10 years (CAGR ~ 13%) Revenue increased from R572.8b to R625 b 45

  46. COST AS PERCENTAGE OF REVENUE

  47. LASTLY… BY OUR OWN ASSESSMENT SARS, DESPITE ITS RELATIVE SUCCESSES STILL HAVE MANY CHALLENGES AHEAD, REMAIN COMMITTED TO THIS JOURNEY

  48. CONCLUSION “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy” Martin Luther King, Jr.

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