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Modernising Company Law and Enhancing Corporate
Governance in the European Union - A Plan to Move Forward
Consultation and public hearing
The Directorate General for Internal
Market and Services is organising a public hearing on future priorities
for the Action Plan on the Modernisation of Company Law and Corporate
Governance on 3 May 2006 in Brussels. Antonio Borges,
ECGI Chairman, will deliver the keynote address. The Directorate
is also inviting stakeholders to submit their contributions by
31 March 2006. See:
Consultation
document
Press
release on the launch of the Consultation
Programme
for the public hearing
Online
registration for the public hearing
Public consultation in 2003
Click here
for the results of consultation on Action Plan, published on 21
November 2003
Background to the Action Plan
Strengthening shareholders rights, reinforcing
protection for employees and creditors and increasing the efficiency
and competitiveness of business are the main aims of the European
Commission's Action Plan on "Modernising
Company Law and Enhancing Corporate Governance in the EU"
presented on 21 May 2003.
It is based on a comprehensive and prioritised
set of proposals for action, covering several years. The Action
Plan devotes special attention to a series of corporate governance
initiatives aiming at boosting confidence on capital markets.
The Plan is open to public consultation for three months. The
Commission will publish a synthesis of the comments received which
will be given adequate consideration
The Commission intends to launch some
initiatives this year or early next year. Simultaneously with
the Action Plan, the Commission has published ten priorities for
improving and harmonising the quality of statutory audit throughout
the EU.
Internal Market Commissioner Frits Bolkestein
said: "Company law and corporate governance are right
at the heart of the political agenda, on both sides of the Atlantic.
That's because economies only work if companies are run efficiently
and transparently. We have seen vividly what happens if they are
not: investment and jobs will be lost; and in the worst cases,
of which there are too many, shareholders, employees, creditors
and the public are ripped off. Prompt action is needed to ensure
sustainable public confidence in financial markets. The Action
Plan provides a clear and considered framework combining new law
where necessary with other solutions. It will help deliver the
integrated and modern company law and corporate governance framework
which businesses, markets and the public are calling for. The
Commission is shouldering its responsibilities: Corporate Europe
must shape up and do the same. Working in partnership, we have
a unique opportunity to strengthen European corporate governance
and to be a model for the rest of the world."
The Action Plan is the Commission's response
to the Final
Report, presented in November 2002, of the High Level
Group of Company Law Experts appointed by Frits Bolkestein and
chaired by Jaap Winter.
Aims and objectives
The Action Plan aims to be flexible in
application, but firm on principles. It also seeks to help shape
international regulatory developments.
The main objectives of the Action Plan
are:
- to strengthen shareholders' rights
and protection for employees, creditors and the other parties
with which companies deal, while adapting company law and corporate
governance rules appropriately for different categories of company;
- to foster the efficiency and competitiveness
of business, with special attention to some specific cross-border
issues.
Why the Plan is needed
The European regulatory framework for
company law and corporate governance needs to be modernised for
the following reasons: the growing trend for European companies
to operate cross-border in the Internal Market, the continuing
integration of European capital markets, the rapid development
of new information and communication technologies, the forthcoming
enlargement of the EU to 10 new Member States, and the damaging
impact of recent financial scandals.
The Action Plan is prioritised over the
short-term (2003-2005), medium-term (2006-2008) and long-term
(2009 onwards), and indicates which type of regulatory instrument
should be used for each proposal, with approximate timescales.
The Action Plan is based on a comprehensive
set of legislative and non-legislative proposals, under the following
headings:
Corporate Governance
The Commission does not believe that
a European Corporate Governance Code would offer significant added
value but would simply add an additional layer between international
principles and national codes. However, a self-regulatory market
approach, based solely on non-binding recommendations, is not
sufficient to guarantee sound corporate governance. In view of
the growing integration of European capital markets, the European
Union should adopt a common approach covering a few essential
rules and should ensure adequate coordination of national corporate
governance codes.
The Commission sees the following initiatives
as the most urgent ones:
- introduction of an Annual Corporate
Governance Statement. Listed companies should be required to
include in their annual documents a coherent and descriptive
statement covering the key elements of their corporate governance
structures and practices
- development of a legislative framework
aiming at helping shareholders to exercise various rights (for
example asking questions, tabling resolutions, voting in absentia,
participating in general meetings via electronic means). These
facilities should be offered to shareholders across the EU,
and specific problems relating to cross-border voting should
be solved urgently
- adoption of a Recommendation aiming
at promoting the role of (independent) non-executive or supervisory
directors. Minimum standards on the creation, composition and
role of the nomination, remuneration and audit committees should
be defined at EU level and enforced by Member States, at least
on a "comply or explain" basis
- adoption of a Recommendation on Directors'
Remuneration. Member States should be rapidly invited to put
in place an appropriate regulatory regime giving shareholders
more transparency and influence, which includes detailed disclosure
of individual remuneration
- creation of a European Corporate Governance
Forum to help encourage coordination and convergence of national
codes and of the way they are enforced and monitored.
Other corporate governance initiatives
proposed in the Action Plan cover: achieving better information
on the role played by institutional investors in corporate governance;
giving further effect to the principle of proportionality between
capital and control; offering to listed companies the choice between
the one-tier and two-tier board structures; and enhancing directors'
responsibilities for financial and key non-financial statements.
The Action Plan notes that there is a strong medium to long term
case for aiming to establish a real shareholder democracy and
that the Commission intends to undertake a study on the consequences
of such an approach.
Capital Maintenance and Alteration
The Commission considers that a simplification
of the 1976 Second Company Law Directive, on the formation of
public limited liability companies and the maintenance and alteration
of their capital, would promote business efficiency and competitiveness
without reducing protection for shareholders and creditors.
A proposal to amend the Second Directive
is therefore a priority for the short term. Such a proposal may
include a partial relaxation of certain rules (applicable inter
alia to contributions in kind, acquisition of own shares, or limitation/withdrawal
of pre-emption rights allowing a company's shareholders to have
first refusal on new shares issued).
It could also include the introduction
of "squeeze-out rights", meaning that the holder of
a large majority of a company's securities could compel minority
shareholders to sell their stock at a fair price, and of "sell-out
rights" allowing minority shareholders to compel holders
of a large majority of the capital to purchase their securities
at a fair price. This would go further than the proposed Directive
on Takeover Bids, which offers those rights only in listed companies
and only when there has been a takeover bid.
Later on, an alternative regime not based
on the concept of legal capital could be offered as an option
to Member States. The Commission will, in the medium term, launch
a study into the feasibility of an alternative based on a solvency
test.
Groups and Pyramids
Groups of companies, which are common
in most Member States, are a legitimate way of doing business,
but they may present risks for shareholders and creditors. More
transparency can help minimise those risks. Initiatives aiming
at improving the financial and non-financial information disclosed
by groups are priorities for the short term. Such initiatives
would aim to ensure better information on the group's structure
and intra-group relations, as well as on the financial situation
of the various parts of the group.
The Action Plan advocates a framework
rule to allow those managing a company belonging to a group to
implement a coordinated group policy. It underlines the need for
action against abusive pyramids, defined by the High Level Group
as chains of holding companies whose sole or main assets are their
shareholding in another listed company.
Corporate Restructuring and Mobility
European companies need to be able more
easily to do business across national borders within the EU. The
Commission intends to present in the short term a new proposal
for a Tenth Company Law Directive facilitating mergers between
companies from different Member States, as well as a proposal
for a Fourteenth Company Law Directive on the transfer of "seat"
(a company's centre of activities and/or registered office) from
one Member State to another. The Action Plan also covers: simplifying
some of the requirements under the Third Company Law Directive
(national mergers) and the Sixth Directive (national divisions),
and introducing squeeze-out and sell-out rights for all public
limited liability companies (see above).
Other matters
The Action Plan includes a number of
other proposals, as follows:
- launching a feasibility study on
the possible introduction of a European Private Company Statute,
which would primarily serve the needs of SME's active in more
than one Member State
- supporting in the short term the ongoing
process aimed at the introduction of several European legal
forms (European Cooperative, European Association, European
Mutual Society), and considering in the medium term the development
of a European Foundation
- increasing the disclosure requirements
applicable to a series of limited liability legal entities existing
at national level.
Simultaneously
with the Action Plan, the Commission has published ten priorities
for improving and harmonising the quality of statutory audit throughout
the EU, to ensure that investors and other interested parties
can rely fully on the accuracy of audited accounts and to prevent
conflicts of interest.
Consultation on the Action Plan
On 21 November 2003, the Commission announced
the results of its consultation on the Action Plan. Internal Market
Commissioner Frits Bolkestein said: “The results of
this consultation show the strength of the consensus on the thrust
of the Action Plan and on the main measures within it, which aim
to deliver an integrated and modern company law and corporate
governance framework. It shows that business, markets and investors
all know that if companies are not run efficiently and openly,
they cannot deliver the right results for their shareholders and
for the wider economy. The Commission will listen carefully to
what respondents are saying on the detail of the Action Plan and
take their comments into account in implementing the various initiatives
within it."
Click here
for access the full synthesis report from the Commission's website
for further details or alternative, see local
download from ECGI site
Next steps
The Commission will implement the Action
Plan, taking due account of the comments expressed in the consultation.
It has already adopted on 18 November a proposal for Directive
on cross-border mergers. Other company law proposals will follow
in 2004, for the simplification and modernisation of the "2nd
Company Law Directive" on capital maintenance and alteration
and for a Directive on the cross-border transfer of company "seat".
As indicated in the Commission work programme
for 2004, the first corporate governance initiatives under the
Action Plan are expected for the second half of 2004. The Commission
sees the following initiatives as the most urgent:
- a Recommendation aiming at promoting
the role of non-executive or supervisory directors (nomination,
remuneration and audit committees)
- a Recommendation on directors' remuneration,
giving shareholders more information and influence.
As announced in the Action Plan, the
Commission will ensure that open, public consultations are organised
where appropriate on the major initiatives of the Action Plan.

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