News & Press: Media Statements

SOE CEO appointments remain a governance minefield: IoDSA

Tuesday, 26 September 2023   (2 Comments)

News reports that the Minister of Public Enterprises has rejected the name put forward by the Eskom board to replace André de Ruyter as CEO once again raising the complex governance issues relating to the appointment of senior management at state-owned enterprises (SOEs). The reported reason for the Minister’s rejection of the board’s nominated candidate is that it was supposed to submit three names as stipulated by the Minister in terms of Eskom’s Memorandum of Incorporation.

Professor Parmi Natesan, CEO of the Institute of Directors in South Africa (IoDSA), says that the Minister’s rejection of the board’s nomination, whatever the technicalities, lays bare the governance tangle that continues to affect the governance balance at SOEs.

“Governance best practice is for the board to appoint the CEO so that he or she is accountable to the board. The challenge is that SOEs have enabling legislation or founding documents which often stipulate that the government (effectively the shareholder) has the power to appoint senior management, as well as the board,” she says. “King IV recognises this, and suggests in the SOE supplement that the board be fully involved in the appointment of the CEO and that both parties agree that the CEO is accountable to the board, not the Minister, as representative of the shareholder.”

If this approach is not followed, she adds, CEOs who do not have the confidence of the board may be appointed, and CEOs may see their reporting line leading directly to the Minister rather than the board. The resulting blurred reporting lines make it difficult for boards and management to work constructively together.

The current state of affairs means that the faith of both the board and the Minister seems questionable. The former could be construed to be not following the Minister’s instructions, or rebellious in that it is asserting its preference for appointing the CEO it wants (in line with governance best practice). Similarly, the latter could be accused of having a hidden agenda, namely that the nomination did not meet with the approval of the political powers.

Professor Natesan says. “The IoDSA has been steadfast in bringing this particular governance issue to the fore, and we once again urge Government and SOEs to follow King IV’s lead. In a perfect world, though, the appointment of the CEO should be the board’s prerogative. The board would then be able to hold the CEO properly to account, and could in turn itself be held to account by the shareholder.”

Comments...

Simphiwe Thobela says...
Posted Wednesday, 06 December 2023
The matter of appointment of CEOs, Senior management and, I dare say, the Boards, is a very complex matter in the public sector. I have served in Boards of SOEs and SOCs and have had a real experience of this complexity. It results in long term acting and vacancies on critical positions. It has also lead to some CEOs defying Boards because of their proximity to Minister/MECs and other political figures. This blurs the role of Boards in holding CEOs accountable. In fact, the question is whether the members of the Boards are, indeed, independent and act in the interest of the entity at all material time. I am not underestimating the role of the "shareholder" but the relationship between the Board and the "shareholder' should be governed in a manner that guarantees the independence of the the Board and its objectivity. We have to probe into the quality and skill of members of the Boards that are appointed whether they understand their role or not? If this continues we shall see a Zondo
Xolile Sizani Pr Eng says...
Posted Monday, 02 October 2023
If Government is seriouse about governance, in the context of the recent Zondo Commission's hearings in general, and the government's "commitment" to improving SOE's specifically, it must (1) make King IV Report and its underlying principles, Law and an ACT of parliament. (2) such a law must have clear regulations particularly with regards to punitive measures to ensure that there are clear consquences for wrong-doers (3) Set-up a special court - Companies Court , like Labour Court, to deal specifically with all company related issues such. Fraud, Non-complaince (e.g. Governance,BBBEE, etc. This way government would be showing seriousness embracing KING IV and its objectives to improve governance in SA (i.e. Private and Public Sector)