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Financial standards - Indian perspective II
This is the second and concluding part of the extracts from the
paper presented by Dr. Y. V. Reddy, Deputy Governor of the
Reserve Bank of India, at a recently held conference on
International Standards and Codes organised by the International
Monetary Fund-World Bank in Washington DC. The paper describes
the Indian perspective and approach in regard to the
implementation of international financial standards and codes
advocated by the Financial Stability Forum (FSF). The first part
appeared in this column on March 22.
THE ADVISORY groups constituted by the Standing Committee on
International Financial Standards and Codes in ten core subject
areas pertaining to the financial system are entrusted with the
task of studying, in detail, the present status of applicability
and relevance and compliance of relevant standards and codes,
reviewing the feasibility of compliance and the timeframe over
which this could be achieved given the prevailing legal and
institutional practices, comparing the levels of adherence in
India, vis-a-vis in industrialised and also emerging economies
particularly to understand India's position and prioritise
actions on some of the more important codes and standards, and to
chalk out a course of action for achieving the best practices.
Out of the set of 12 subjects (actually eleven as accounting and
auditing are taken together) areas for which standards and codes
that have been prescribed by international financial institutions
and other standard setting bodies pertaining to the financial
system, the Standing Committee has so far identified ten core
subjects for immediate attention and assessment by the advisory
groups. These are, transparency in monetary and financial
policies, data dissemination, payments and settlement system,
banking supervision, securities market regulation, accounting and
auditing, fiscal transparency, insurance regulation, bankruptcy
laws and corporate governance. The twelfth area namely 'Market
integrity' associated with the 20 recommendations of the
Financial Action TaskForce (FATF) on money laundering is not
being presently looked into by the Standing Committee.
It may need to be mentioned that all the advisory groups are
chaired by eminent experts not generally holding official
positions in Government or other regulatory bodies. While the
chairmen of these advisory groups were identified and nominated
by the Standing Committee, taking into account the experience and
expertise, the choice of members of these advisory groups, was
completely left to the chairmen of advisory groups. The members
are generally non-official experts in relevant subject areas. The
groups have, however, the option of including officials from the
Government, the Reserve Bank of India and the Securities and
Exchange Board of India as special invitees. Such officials help
in providing inputs on the understanding of extant position
relating to the relevant standards and codes and also the steps
under way towards improvements.
This arrangement keeps the advisory groups outside the sphere of
official influence and allows them to make critical assessment of
relevance and state of compliance with standards and codes and
give unbiased recommendations with regard to the feasibility of
compliance and the necessity of achieving best practices in the
areas covered by them.
In order to facilitate exchange of information and expertise on
matters of mutual interest, the advisory groups have the option
of having interactions/consultations among themselves and many
did exercise the option.
The advisory groups may also jointly deliberate on overlapping
issues in certain subject areas to evolve a consistent approach.
In finalising its report, the Standing Committee would, however,
attempt to consolidate these overlapping areas. The reports of
the advisory groups are made public, as soon as they are
submitted to the Standing Committee.
The Standing Committee also periodically reviews the progress of
the advisory group and is required to review its own status after
the completion of one year and report to the Government/RBI.
The secretariat support to the Standing Committee is provided by
the RBI.
Work processes
In view of the varied nature of the subject areas, each advisory
group decided to design its own methods and processes of work.
Thus, some groups mounted special studies or technical papers,
some divided the work of preparing basic technical papers among
each of the members and most depended heavily on the background
material collected and analysed by professionals in the RBI.
While an advisory group gave an interim report, the general
preference turned out to be in favour of final reports, sometimes
in parts submitted sequentially.
In some of the subject areas, the government concerned or
regulatory bodies had already constituted some study groups and
hence it was argued on occasions that the advisory groups are
duplicating such efforts. In such cases, it became necessary to
clarify that the work of the advisory groups is without prejudice
to any other official and non-official initiatives, and that the
work is not meant to be intrusive. It also became necessary to
encourage the advisory groups to take account in their
deliberations such parallel, though partial, efforts and provide
appropriate inputs to such efforts whenever sought. The process
was made easier in several cases as one or more members of
relevant The Advisory Group happened to be so eminent as to be
involved in several of the initiatives.
Some advisory groups had to reckon with the fact that their
perception of compliance with international standards differed
from the official stance of authorities concerned, that is, the
regulator or the government body. The non-official status of the
advisory groups has enabled them to consider the official stance
but make its own independent assessment of degree of compliance.
In some of the advisory groups there has been a view in favour of
making recommendations on substantive policy-issues, while the
mandate was, say on, transparency. There have also been occasions
when the group tended to comment on functioning of official
bodies in the context of standards.
In the preparation of their respective reports, most advisory
groups have also been studying and reviewing international
experience in various subject areas. In particular, the report of
the Advisory Group on monetary and financial policies took
comprehensive account of extant institutional arrangements and
practices in five countries namely, the U.K., the U.S.,
Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. The Advisory Group on
Bankruptcy Laws has examined the existing Acts on insolvency and
bankruptcy in the U.S. and select countries in Europe and Asia.
The Advisory Group on Accounting and Auditing has conducted in
depth studies of the International Accounting Standards (IAS),
the U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (U.S. GAAP) and
the comparative structure of Accounting Standards in India and
standards issued by the Accounting Standards Board of the
Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI).
In the course of their work, the advisory groups have also been
having the benefit of discussions with market participants,
members from professional bodies as well as academics. The
Advisory Group on Insurance Regulation met the officials of the
Life Insurance Corporation of India and the Advisory Group on
Fiscal Transparency had extensive discussions with all State
finance secretaries and the Office of the Comptroller and Auditor
General of India. The advisory groups have, in most cases, co-
opted market participants and members from professional bodies as
special invitees. For example, the Advisory Group on Payments and
Settlement System has special invitees from the National Stock
Exchange (NSE) and a member from academia. The Advisory Group on
Accounting and Auditing has a member from the Institute of
Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) and other well known market
participants and practising professionals. Similarly, the
Advisory Group on Securities Market Regulation and the Advisory
Group on Banking Supervision have eminent experts from Housing
Development Finance Corporation (HDFC) and ICICI Bank. The
Advisory Group on Bankruptcy Laws also includes practising
professionals and eminent academics, including the former
Director of National Law School as the Chairman of the Group.
The advisory groups were encouraged to prepare in tabular form
the given international standard/code, current status in India
and the corresponding recommendation of the group as a supplement
to the narrative to facilitate easy reference.
As and when the reports are received by the Standing Committee,
they are placed on the RBI's website for immediate wider public
dissemination.
Current status
As of now, the reports/part of reports in respect of the
following subjects have already been received by the Standing
Committee: Transparency of Monetary and Financial Policies
(Final), Payment and Settlement System (Parts I and II ),
Insurance Regulation (Final - Parts I and II), Banking
Supervision (Part I), Accounting and Auditing (Final), Bankruptcy
Laws (Interim). All reports have been placed on the RBI website
and are in the process of being published for wider dissemination
and discussion.
Plans for follow up
The Standing Committee would consolidate the reports of all
advisory groups and prepare its own report containing executive
summaries/highlights of all the reports, action points requiring
attention by regulatory authorities/agencies concerned with the
follow up. The Standing Committee report also would be widely
disseminated to the public as the advisory group reports.
The advisory group would be requested to help organise a
seminar/workshop for a day in an appropriate institution/centre
for creating awareness and this would help the Standing Committee
to concretise the views on recommendations.
For each report, a mailing list covering both public sector and
private sector organisations, international institutions and
experts, both local and international, would be also be
identified and finalised in consultation with the chairman of
each advisory group. The Standing Committee would request
specific comments/feedback on the recommendations of the advisory
group from these addressees.
The Standing Committee would prepare an annual review of status
and progress regarding compliance with, and implementation of
standards and codes and submit it to the Ministry of Finance.
Highlights
The Indian position which recognises the significance, scope,
limits and contextual degree of relevance of international
financial standard and codes has been considered by a broad
spectrum of experts, intellectuals and market participants as
reasonable.
Second, the need to assess Indian standards and codes with
international benchmarks has also elicited broad support.
Third, the impact of the process could often be indirect and not
necessarily direct and instant. For example, the Secretary
Department of Company Affairs in a recent address to the
accountants and auditors referred to the work of the Standing
Committee and related it to the ongoing amendments to the Company
Law.
Fourth, the participative processes also have a multiplier effect
in terms of several means by which the codes and standards are
disseminated. For example, the widely read Economic Survey 2000-
01 of the Central Government released as part of set of Budget
Documents makes a detailed reference to the subject (vide Box 6.4
on International Financial Standards and Codes). There have also
been extensive references to this in several publications of the
RBI.
Fifth, several prominent intellectuals, professionals, and market
participants contributed to the process of benchmarking, and
identifying gaps and they participated in the exercise in a
purely honorary capacity, as a national endeavour
Sixth, such a process brought out the possible differing views
between official bodies or authorities and domestic independent
opinion as regards the extent of compliance with such codes and
standards. It is considered necessary to recognise this and try
to arrive at a consensus.
Seventh, some concern on the part of official authorities to such
an independent assessment is understandable but could be
significantly overcome through their participation as special
invitees and the efforts of advisory group which have members of
national standing.
Eighth, many areas of overlap among the areas covered by
different advisory groups were observed. Also, each advisory
group had to interact with several regulatory and standard
setting bodies. The process thus becomes quite complex,
especially when the jurisdictional issues come up.
Ninth, several standard setting bodies including professional
associations and self-regulatory bodies of market participants
involved with current practices have, on occasions had concerns
about the advisory groups findings but special efforts by the
advisory groups helped assuage these concerns.
Tenth, the work of the advisory groups required substantial
technical and professional inputs located in several agencies,
public and private. These had to be pooled and collated.
Eleventh, the advisory groups have found it difficult to focus
entirely on compliance issues since there is a preoccupation with
immediate issues of operational significance to the market
participants and such issues may be policy or procedural or may
even be of short term relevance. The main focus has not been,
however, lost sight of.
Twelfth, the enthusiasm for disclosure and transparency in public
agencies is not matched by eagerness to be transparent on the
part of private sector. The private sector's participation in the
process helped a better appreciation of the importance of
disclosures.
Finally, four lessons from the exercise appear to be relevant.
The process of implementation demands significant resources and
is time-consuming. Moreover, most of the follow-up activities
require some legislative changes.
In the ultimate analysis, adoption of the standards has to be
driven by self-interest of the country and attempts should be
toward harmony and ultimate convergence rather than mechanical
compliance.
(Concluded)
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