5 Dariya News

Ethical practices & good corporate governance can boost GDP by 1.5-2% much like GST: Piyush Goyal

Govt. working on holistic approach to ease discoms’ financial stress through corporate goveranance

5 Dariya News

New Delhi 14-Aug-2015

Good ethical practices and corporate governance norms followed by the companies can boost the gross domestic product (GDP) by 1.5-2 per cent much like the potential spinoff benefits of the goods and services tax (GST), union power minister, Mr Piyush Goyal said at an ASSOCHAM event held in New Delhi today. “If we are going to run our organisations with defined processes and a degree of serious and ethical guidelines which will always have an element of integrity at the core, to my mind getting a 1.5-2 per cent bump in the GDP, good additional growth in the GDP is certainly not impossible, very much achievable and possibly one could do even better than that,” said Mr Goyal while inaugurating ‘Corporate Governance Summit-cum-Excellence Awards,’ organised by The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM). “To my mind, ethical practices and good governance can possibly add as much to the Indian economy as GST could,” said Mr Goyal. “The impact of good governance, corporate governance can be felt when one looks at the top sensex stocks and you find that good, reputed companies are given a premium for good practices,” he added. 

Talking about the discoms’ financial stress, the union minister said, “We are in active dialogue with discoms, we have a broad framework under which I am very confident, three or four discoms which are really under stress will have a roadmap and in the next three years you will see a sea change in discom story of India.” On being asked if the government was looking at extending financial restructuring plan (FRP) for the discoms, Mr Goyal said, “FRP which was introduced originally in April 2012 and implemented in October 2013 had actually not really changed the situation on the ground, it failed to bring about any significant improvement in AT&C (aggregate technical and commercial losses, in the financial losses of the companies.” “We are working on a more holistic approach where the companies, the discoms themselves will be encouraged to bring about the change, the turnaround through good corporate governance practices and we will hand-hold them and ensure that within a defined timeframe we turn these around,” he added. 

The union power minister also said that he is looking at National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) Limited, which won the ASSOCHAM Corporate Governance Award in the PSU (listed company) category, as the world’s most valuable energy company four years from now. “I am going to hold to NTPC to this when I am continuously telling them you have to be the world's most valuable power company in the next four years.” Amid others who spoke at the ASSOCHAM summit included – Mr Sunil Kanoria, senior vice-president, ASSOCHAM; Ms Preeti Malhotra, chairperson, ASSOCHAM National Council for Corporate Affairs & CSR; Mr Pavan Kumar Vijay, managing director, Corporate Professionals and Mr D.S. Rawat, secretary general, ASSOCHAM.