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Samenvatting - Governance (D0N73a) 19/20

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Dit is een volledige samenvatting van het vak “D0N73a: Governance” gedoceerd door N. Houthaeve (Deloitte) en andere Deloitte gastsprekers in het academiejaar 2024/2025. Ik behaalde voor dit vak een 19/20. Deze samenvatting is gebaseerd op alle slides en lessen. Dit vak wordt gegeven als keuzevak in de opleidingen Toegepaste Economische Wetenschappen, Handelsingenieur, Master Accountancy en Revisoraat.

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Subido en
25 de agosto de 2025
Número de páginas
43
Escrito en
2024/2025
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Resumen

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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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