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Business Regulation & Corporate Conduct: Evidence from Indian States

This presentation explores the interplay between business regulation and corporate conduct in India, focusing on the responsible behavior of corporations. It examines the impact of regulation on business performance and highlights regional variations within India. The presentation also discusses the evolution of business regulation and corporate conduct on a global and national scale, as well as the various dimensions and determinants of corporate conduct.

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Business Regulation & Corporate Conduct: Evidence from Indian States

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  1. Can Business Regulation Stimulate Responsible Corporate Conduct ? Gathering Evidence from a Few Indian StatesRegional Dialogue (NORTHERN INDIA)Exploring the interplay between Business Regulation & Corporate Conduct in India (BRCC Project)12th July 2011, Jaipur

  2. Aspects of Business Regulation and Corporate ConductSameer ChaturvediCUTS International

  3. Presentation Theme • Business Regulation and Business Performance • Assessing Business Performance – Global • Assessing Business Performance – Inter-State (India) • Business Regulation and Corporate Conduct • Aspects of Business Regulation • Corporate Conduct – Global and National Evolution • Aspects of Corporate Conduct • Stakeholder Interaction Framework

  4. Business Regulation and Business Performance • Government acts as articulator, enabler, facilitator, regulator, gap-filler and buffer • Business deploys capital, engages labour, produce goods and generate profit that is re-invested. • Regulatory implications - business, growth, development and equity • Effective Regulation ~ Better Business Performance

  5. Dimensions of Business Regulation

  6. Assessing Business Performance

  7. Highlights from Doing Business Report (WB & IFC) 2011 • India’s overall Rank – 134 (out of 183) • Getting Credit– 32nd, Protecting Investors - 44th • Enforcing Contracts - 182nd, Construction Permits – 177th, Starting Business – 165th, Taxes – 164th • Registering Property: India - 5 procedures, takes 44 days; Turkey- 6 procedures, takes 6 days. • Enforcing Contracts, - 1420 days in India; 406 days in China; 281 days in Russia; 230 days in Korea • Taxation Payments (No.) – In India 56 in a year, in China & France only 7 payments in a year • Closing Business - 7 yrs in India & 1.7 yrs in China • Recovery rate (closing a business) - India is 16.3%, 36.4% in China, 81.7% in Korea & 92.7% in Japan

  8. Inter-state Variations in India – Highlights from Doing Business India Report (WB & IFC) 2009 • Not much variation in starting business – Maximum is 41 days (Kochi) & Minimum is 30 days (Noida) • Construction Permits - takes 37 procedures in Mumbai, as against 15 in Ahmedabad, Bengaluru and Chennai • 258 days for construction permits in Kolkata, as against Bengaluru, where the same work gets done in 97 days • Registering Property - 126 days in Bhubaneshwar whereas it takes 24 days in Jaipur • In Bengaluru, a firm has to bear 32.5% cost of claim in enforcing contracts, whereas in Patna it is 17% • It requires 10.8 years to close a business in Kolkata, whereas in Ahmadabad, the time spent for such formalities is 6.8 years.

  9. Aspects of Business Regulation • “Conscious adoption one set of activities (that are considered legal or/and moral) as well as deliberate abandonment of another set of activities (that are considered illegal or/and immoral)” • Typologies of Regulation: • Public Regulation, • Co-regulation • Self Regulation

  10. Evolution of Concept Globally • 1948 – Universal Declaration on Human Rights • 1997 – SA 8000 (Social Accountability International) • 1998-2006 – Global Reporting Initiative (G3) • 2000 – Millennium Declaration • 2000 – United Nations Global Compact • 2001 – OECD Guidelines for MNEs • 2003 – UN Norms on Responsibilities of TNCs and other Businesses on Human Rights • 2010 – Guidance on Social Responsibility ISO 26000 • 2011 - Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights

  11. Evolution of Concept Nationally • Mahatma Gandhi’s notion of large Businesses as ‘Trusts’ • 1950-60: Nehruvian mixed economy model, private sector with responsibility in development • Individual Code of Conducts & Responsibility • 1991 Liberalization reforms, raised expectations • 2007 – Guidelines on Corporate Governance for Central Public Sector Enterprises, GoI • 2009 – Voluntary Guidelines on Corporate Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility • 2010 - Guidelines on Corporate Social Responsibility for Central PSE, GoI • 2011 – Guidelines on Social, Environmental and Economic Responsibilities of Business

  12. Aspects of Corporate Conduct • Facets - corporate governance, corporate social responsibility, fair trade, labour norms, credibility charters, integrity codes, embodiment of green business practices, accountability initiatives, proactive disclosures, stakeholder engagements… • Determinants of Corporate Conduct • Internal • Operational • External

  13. Stakeholder Interaction Framework

  14. Thank You!

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