Lem Bingley
Lem Bingley

Governance rules will get business moving

Will a European Sarbanes-Oxley-style directive cause unprecedented corporate upheaval?

Written by Lem Bingley

As you may well have read this month, the European Commission is currently drawing up new European Union legislation that aims to do for us what the Sarbanes-Oxley (Sox) Act did for the Americans. The new proposed regulations on corporate financial responsibility will seek to prevent the kind of legerdemain that allowed fraud to flourish at companies like Enron in the US and Parmalat in the EU.

Analysts and lawyers are already forecasting that the new European legislation will be even tougher than Sox, at least in terms of the stipulations and requirements imposed on boardroom officers and their squads of bean inspectors. All of whom will, in turn, demand that the IT department assemble great piles of information to support their book balancing.

But there is a key difference between the US and the EU that could have a huge impact on the way that EuroSox, if I can call it that, will work in practice.

As politicians are fond or reminding us, we don't yet live in a federal Europe. Although there are European laws, they apply to nation states and not to individuals or corporations. Decrees from Brussels are enacted as directives, which only begin to apply to people and businesses when they trigger the creation of new national laws.

As a consequence, while the US Sarbanes-Oxley Act is able to spell out sphincter-loosening penalties for fat cats caught pocketing wads of cash - 20 years in a room with a rather poor view, for example - EuroSox must make do with less certain deterrents. As the proposal puts it, "Member States shall provide effective, proportionate and dissuasive civil, administrative or criminal penalties."

Dissuasive is an unusual word at the best of times, and is certainly open to interpretation by national lawmakers. What seems clear is that, if EuroSox leads to real laws, the European Union will have created a somewhat lumpy playing field.

What will happen is what always happens in such circumstances - those states that want to attract investment will make their laws lax. That's the way it works with taxation. It's no coincidence that the Fortune 500 list is top-heavy with firms that are legally run from Delaware, even if most have their actual base of operations in California or New York. Delaware corporations get to keep more of their profits, a factor that attracts businesses much as a bone attracts scavenging dogs.

And just as a US chief executive may see it as a fiduciary duty to reincorporate in Delaware, so a European directeur general may see it as a duty to his own skin to reincorporate in Ireland, if the Irish happen to have the softest sentences and the most comfortable prisons, should the worst happen. It's common-sense risk reduction, after all.

The situation is made doubly unpredictable by the imminent enlargement of the EU. New and less well off member states could easily see EuroSox as a ticket to tax euros.

For IT, the implications are awkward. Not only may the corporate IT manager soon be asked to offer impossible guarantees that the accounting package is free of bugs, he or she may also struggle to set up a secure, high-bandwidth, failsafe connection to the new head office in Latvia.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

Governance documents

Corporate governance

IT chiefs have a key role to play in improving corporate governance 01 Oct 2004

 

Firms urged to prepare for storage compliance

Analyst IDC recommends head start for corporate governance legislation 22 Jun 2004

IT gets ready for audit rules

New regulations for finance and corporate governance are creating more work for IT teams, but could also bring benefits 15 Apr 2004

IT holds key to governance

Upcoming revisions to European auditing rules could bring hard work for many IT departments 05 Apr 2004

Oracle anticipates auditing

Business software is updated to meet the demands of new financial reporting regulations 30 Mar 2004

Europe needs to pull its SOX up

Firms outside US not ready for Sarbanes-Oxley compliance, finds report 29 Jan 2004

related whitepapers

today's top stories

What does Windows 7 mean for Microsoft?

With the sting of Vista still fresh, Redmond has to make next Windows work 10 Jul 2009

A smarter way to use BI

Getting the most from business intelligence systems requires not only careful management on the part of IT leaders, but also the committed involvement of decision-makers across the organisation 08 Jul 2009

The truth behind the Google/Microsoft/NHS rumours

Before Monday 6 July, did you know that Google and Microsoft had services for storing health records? Thanks to an article in... 10 Jul 2009

Quenching a thirst for IT modernisation

A substantial restructure at soft drink supplier Nichols -­ purveyor of Vimto - ­led the company to update its software to Sage 1000 to replace its in-house application. This resulted in the streamlining of the IT department and an opportunity to customise the system 08 Jul 2009

How Satyam cleaned up its act

Chief executive CP Gurnani tells Angelica Mari why Tech Mahindra opted to keep the Satyam brand after it bought the scandal-hit services firm, and explains what the deal means for existing and prospective customers 09 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Will Google Chrome OS be a genuine alternative to Windows?

Will Google Chrome OS be a genuine alternative to Windows?

Tell us your views on the new operating system rivalry

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

network cablesVideo

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

green footprintsVideo

How to manage enterprise energy use - and the role IT can play

A panel of experts explore how firms can get to grips with their carbon footprint and make smarter use of energy 01 Jul 2009

Latest in-depth articles

Google ChromeAnalysis

Lack of enterprise appeal takes shine off Chrome OS

Enterprise buyers unlikely to ditch Windows for Chrome OS in the near term, say experts 09 Jul 2009

Satyam CEO CP GurnaniNews

How Satyam cleaned up its act

Chief executive CP Gurnani tells Angelica Mari why Tech Mahindra opted to keep the Satyam brand after it bought the scandal-hit services firm, and explains what the deal means for existing and prospective customers 09 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Primary Navigation