Jamaica Gleaner

Nissan’s governance committee says Ghosn had too much power

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ANISSAN committee set up to strengthen corporate governance after the arrest of former Chairman Carlos Ghosn said last week that an investigat­ion found that he had wielded too much power and recommende­d that the scandal-hit Japanese automaker add more independen­t outside directors to its board and better oversee compensati­on and auditing.

In measures announced in Yokohama, where Nissan Motor Co is headquarte­red, the governance committee said it concluded that the “root cause of the misconduct was the concentrat­ion of all authority in Mr Ghosn”.

The committee’s findings, which were submitted to the company’s board, underline Nissan’s efforts to distance itself from Ghosn’s upcoming criminal trial.

Ghosn, who led Nissan for two decades and rescued it from near-bankruptcy, says he is innocent. Arrested in November, he has been charged with falsifying financial reports in under-reporting his compensati­on and with breach of trust in having Nissan shoulder investment losses and making payments to a Saudi businessma­n.

Seiichiro Nishioka, a former judge and the co-chair of the governance committee, said the investigat­ion found that the problems were caused by what he called misconduct by an individual manager involving pursuit of personal gain and were different from past wrongdoing at some other Japanese companies such as accounting fraud.

The post of chairman at Nissan,

which had been held by Ghosn, will be abolished, according to the committee’s proposals.

“The facts show there were governance problems at Nissan,” Nishioka told reporters, stressing that checks and balances needed to detect the wrongdoing were missing.

A group to monitor compensati­on will be made up of all outside independen­t directors while groups to oversee director appointmen­ts and auditing will consist mostly of outside independen­t directors.

The governance committee has met several times, including to question Nissan executives to find out what led to Ghosn’s arrest.

Nissan Chief Executive Hiroto Saikawa has denounced Ghosn as the “mastermind” of what he called profession­al financial misconduct while declining comment on the criminal trial proceeding­s.

Ghosn has said that the compensati­on was never decided or paid, Nissan never suffered the investment losses, and the payments were for legitimate services.

The date of Ghosn’s trial has not been set, but it is not expected to start for several months, which is routine for Japanese trials. Ghosn was released on bail earlier this month.

Governance experts say Nissan lagged behind other major Japanese companies, including rival Toyota Motor Corp, in governance measures such as having outside board directors and institutin­g checks on compensati­on.

Bruce Aronson, an affiliated scholar at the US-Asia Law Institute, New York University School of Law, who has taught in Japan and serves as an outside director at a listed Japanese company, welcomed what Nissan was doing as “a good step forward, in line with other Japanese companies”.

In a telephone interview, Aaronson that said Ghosn’s case is providing valuable lessons for Japan amid rapid globalisat­ion.

More than 90 per cent of major Japanese companies have two or more independen­t outside directors on their boards, a ratio that has grown rapidly since 2015, when a new governance code was passed.

Nissan’s evolving relationsh­ip with French alliance partner Renault SA complicate­s the issues. When Ghosn was sent in by Renault, Nissan sorely needed his help to cut costs and steer its way back to growth. These days, Nissan is more profitable than Renault, but many perceive Renault as wielding more managerial power.

Renault owns 43 per cent of Nissan while Nissan owns 15 per cent of Renault. The French government is the top stakeholde­r in Renault.

 ?? AP ?? Co-chairs of the Special Committee for Improving Governance, Seiichiro Nishioka (left) and Sadayuki Sakakibara (right) attend a press conference in Yokohama, near Tokyo, on Wednesday, March 27, 2019.
AP Co-chairs of the Special Committee for Improving Governance, Seiichiro Nishioka (left) and Sadayuki Sakakibara (right) attend a press conference in Yokohama, near Tokyo, on Wednesday, March 27, 2019.

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