Audio By Carbonatix
Lack of a comprehensive national corporate governance code is affecting delivery in both the public and private sectors, Mrs Marian Barnor, the Managing Consultant of MRB Consult said on Wednesday.
Speaking at a validation workshop of the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) on corporate governance organised by the Private Enterprise Foundation, Mrs. Banor reiterated the need for the country to have a comprehensive code for corporate governance to guide both the private and public sectors.
Currently, there are voluntary codes being implemented by various institutions and organisations to enhance transparency and accountability in their operations.
The workshop is to validate or confirm the findings of the 2008 monitoring and evaluation exercise undertaken by the Private Enterprise Foundation.
Mrs. Barnor said the state of corporate governance in Ghana was not encouraging and needed to be addressed.
She cited inadequate awareness of corporate governance; lack of policy framework, enforcement and compliance governing businesses; and issues with Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) as some of the greatest challenges being faced in the area of corporate governance.
On SMEs, Mrs. Barnor said the problems are institutional, in terms of their governance framework.
She said, although most companies usually met the legal requirement of at least having two Directors, they did not have in place the appropriate legal structure.
“It may consist of a man and his wife heading a company but have no board of governors”, she said.
She said if SMEs pay appropriate attention to issues of corporate governance, it could help them to address the problem of lack access to credit and enable them get the necessary capital to expand their operations.
She said some companies put majority shareholders in charge as managers without examining whether they have the skills and know-how in governing a company.
Mrs Barnor suggested that SMEs needed to restructure their governance system, in that they must understand the role of shareholders, Board of Directors and Management to serve as checks among themselves.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Kpandai rerun: Matthew Nyindam leads NDC candidate with 50% support – Global InfoAnalytics
2 minutes -
Hollywood director Rob Reiner and wife Michele found dead in LA home
4 minutes -
The Intelligence We Forgot: Why indigenous and ancestral knowledge is Africa’s missing AI superpower
10 minutes -
The Tongue That Burns the Flag: How Political Insults Are Stealing Ghana’s Future
11 minutes -
Mobile money transactions hits GH¢3trn as digital payments surge – BoG Report
31 minutes -
Retirement Is Not Disposal: Why Ghana Must Keep Using the Wisdom of Retired Teachers
34 minutes -
US applauds Ghana–US cooperation as 9 Ghanaians extradited over cybercrime
54 minutes -
The final mic: A nation pauses as Daddy Lumba takes his bow
1 hour -
Amin Adam rejects ‘blind loyalty’ claims, says Northern support for Bawumia is based on competence
1 hour -
Ghana Card becomes mandatory for insurance transactions from 2026
1 hour -
December in GH: Beware of ‘I don’t have Cedis borgas’
1 hour -
No $300 daily allowance: GAF explains real UN peacekeeping pay
1 hour -
One dead, another in critical condition after wild bees’ attack
1 hour -
Michael Okyere Baafi hosts 2025 Christmas ‘Shop for Free’ initiative for elderly in New Juaben South
1 hour -
Opoku-Agyemang urges long-term investment to grow Africa’s film and creative economy
2 hours
