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Many promoters propping up wives, kin in company boardrooms
Panaji, April 29
Inclusion of women in company
board rooms is a good sign, but instances of promoters propping up
their wives or kin are also common, according to president of the
Institute of Company Secretaries of India Atul Mehta.
Mehta, who
was in Goa on Wednesday to conduct a capacity-building workshop for
young company secretaries, also said that the Companies Act 2013, which
came into force last year, needed constant tinkering and would need at
least a year more to "settle down".
When asked if mandatory
inclusion of women directors on boards of companies, with a turnover of
Rs.300 crore, would also result in nepotism and the inclusion of kin or
wives of company promoters in boardrooms, Mehta said: "It is happening."
Mehta
also told IANS that if one takes a sample of companies, there would be
many with wives of promoters on the Board of Directors, but also added
that gender diversity of the boardroom was now part of the global
corporate agenda.
"I am very happy that India already has this
inbuilt into the Companies Act (2013) and now it is compulsory in SEBI
also. The belief is, once you have a woman director and gender diversity
on the board, corporate governance level will go one step above," Mehta
said.
Speaking about the new Companies Act 2013, which was
brought in by the erstwhile United Progressive Alliance government,
Mehta said that while the new legislation did codify grey areas in the
earlier legislation and brought in a lot of innovation like the
one-man-company entity or legally allowing for video conferencing for
board of directors meetings and allowing scope for corporate governance
to blossom and fraud-check mechanisms, there were still several chinks,
where were emerging and would take at least a year more to level out.
"This
Companies Act 2013 will get settled over a period of time," Mehta said,
adding that the Institute was in constant contact with the Ministry of
Corporate Affairs over the nagging elements in the law.
"This Act
has come after a very long time and there are a lot of challenges in
interpretation, drafting and the provisions of the act," he said.
The
Companies Act 2013, replaces the Companies act 1956 and provides the
legal framework for corporate governance and day-to-day functioning of
over 10 lakh companies registered in India.