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Summary - Governance (D0n73a) 19/20

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This is a complete summary of the course “D0n73a: Governance” taught by N. Houthaeve (Deloitte) and other Deloitte guest speakers in the 2024/2025 academic year. I obtained a 19/20 for this course. This summary is based on all slides and lessons. This course is taught as an elective in the Applied Economic Sciences, Business Engineer, Master Accountancy and Audit courses.

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SAMENVATTING GOVERNANCE
24-25


N. HOUTHAEVE (DELOITTE)
&
PROF. ANN GAEREMYNCK (KU LEUVEN)




1

, Session 1: Introduction to Corporate Governance

1) Introduction to Corporate Governance

• Milton Friedman (1970):

◦ Article: “The social responsibility of business is to increase its profits.”

◦ Triggered by debate on independent directors at General Motors.

◦ View: companies should focus only on profit maximization → shareholders decide
what to do with profits.

◦ Narrow, shareholder-only perspective.

• Corporate scandals (1980s–1990s):

◦ Guinness: inflated share price to outbid competitor during acquisition.

◦ BCCI (bank): money laundering.

◦ Polly Peck: CEO self-enrichment.

◦ Result: public confidence in companies declined → pressure to reform
governance.

• Cadbury Report (UK, 1992):

◦ First widely recognized definition of corporate governance.

◦ “Holding the balance between economic and social goals and between individual
and communal goals.”

◦ Governance framework should:

▪ Encourage efficient resource use.

▪ Require accountability for stewardship.

▪ Align interests of individuals, corporations, and society.




2

,Why Corporate Governance Matters

• Companies must balance shareholders’ interests with stakeholders’ interests
(employees, suppliers, customers, public).

• Example: family business:

◦ Some family members want profits distributed regularly (dividends).

◦ Others want profits reinvested for long-term growth.

◦ Governance helps balance both perspectives → e.g. through a family charter
(rules about ownership, dividends, succession).



Definitions of Corporate Governance

• Belgian CG Code (2009):

◦ Set of rules and behaviours on how companies are managed and controlled.

◦ Seeks balance between leadership, entrepreneurship, performance ↔ control
and compliance.

◦ Embedded in values: integrity, transparency, proper supervision, accountability.

◦ In practice: avoids conflicts of interest, monitors risks, prevents abuse of power.

• OECD definition:

◦ Corporate governance = how you run the business while considering different
stakeholders’ interests.

• Key idea: It’s not about “what” the company does, but about “how” it is governed.



Core Principles of Good Governance

• Balance: between shareholders and wider stakeholders.

• Common sense: avoid misuse of power, unauthorized risk-taking.

• Checks and balances: mechanisms of monitoring, oversight, transparency.

• Agency problem: arises when management acts in its own interest instead of the
company’s or shareholders’.


3

, Regulation – From Soft Law to Hard Law

• Originally, governance was based on recommendations (“soft law”) → many companies
ignored them.

• Over time, elements became mandatory in law (“hard law”):

◦ Annual report must include governance disclosures.

◦ Gender quota on boards.

◦ Rules on remuneration and audit committees.

• Still uses “comply or explain”: companies must either follow the Code or explain why they
deviate.

• Belgian legislation timeline:

◦ 2002: Law on auditor independence.

◦ 2004: Code Lippens

◦ 2005: Code Buysse I (family & non-listed companies).

◦ 2008: Law on Audit Committees.

◦ 2009: Belgian CG Code 2009

◦ Code Buysse II

◦ 2010: Law on remuneration & good governance + Shareholder’s rights act

◦ 2011: Law on gender quota

◦ 2017: Code Buysse III

◦ 2019: New Companies Code + New Belgian CG Code 2020.



The Belgian Corporate Governance Code 2020

• Third version, replacing 2009 Code.

• Principle-based: 10 principles, fewer detailed provisions (more flexibility, less formality).

• Comply or explain remains the foundation → but explanations must be detailed and
credible.

4

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