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  • Jerry Schuitema

Name; shame; throw in jail.


Time to hold individuals behind corporate and financial malfeasance accountable.

Justice is the supreme condition that makes societies work. Few things can drive people to greater anger and frustration than when justice is seen not to be done. Yet it has been a feature of modern times that massive misconduct, white collar crimes, and tax and price manipulation have gone unpunished with perpetrators hiding behind corporate structures and complexity shields.

In the last ten years, after a financial crisis that exacerbated wealth inequalities and devastated millions of lives, public frustration and anger has grown to outrage. A recent Aljazeera documentary noted: “The economic crisis that eventually followed had a devastating impact. From 2008 to 2011, almost 30 million people around the world lost their jobs, according to the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs. Officially, the US government also spent $700bn in bailouts for banks, although some experts argue the numbers are much higher, in the trillions.”

"Without the crisis, Brexit would not have happened and Trump would not be the president of the United States," says Martin Wolf, the chief economics commentator at the Financial Times. “This is a major turning point; you never know what it will be but the [economic collapse of the] '30s transformed the world.”

There is a scary saying taking hold: “Currency wars lead to trade wars; trade wars lead to cold wars and cold wars lead to hot wars.” I leave it up to you to decide at which point in that continuum, often demonstrated in history, we are in.

The saddest thing, and perhaps the real issue is the absence of justice and individual accountability. David Enrich, finance editor for the New York Times; observes”: "Time and time again the people that they're going after are these little minnows. They're not going after the big fish, are not going after the bankers for the most part, they're certainly not going after the senior executives at the banks or other big financial institutions that were the decision-makers leading up to the financial crisis.

South Africa is making an excellent case study of a faltering justice process: of justice delayed and denied. Never before in our history, including the 1995 Truth and Reconciliation process; has so much malfeasance and corruption been laid bare as we are currently witnessing through the Zondo and PIC commissions. The conundrum that has been created is that the revelations and identification of deep and wide corruption are in themselves signs of a determined effort to come to grips with the problem. But the slow pace of legal action, conviction and sentencing have a counter effect of widening the trust deficit. For President Ramaphosa it creates a paradox of being seen as resolute and a reformer on the one hand but weak and conciliatory on the other.

There is a sense that things are moving into higher gear with the S.I.U special tribunal, announced by Ramaphosa in February, starts its work soon on recovering money lost to corruption. But it’s a moot point whether the continuum from finger-pointing to jail can ever be speedily and satisfactorily completed. Is the legislative framework adequate? Are the criminal acts too complex? Do we have the prosecuting skills to ensure appropriate sentencing? These are questions that threaten the fight against corruption and public confidence in the process. What is most sorely needed is to shift accountability from institutions and the occasional minnow to the big fish. Big names languishing in prison will go a long way to restoring trust.

Individual accountability is currently being examined in South Africa. According to Finn Elliot, Associate Director at Financial Services Regulatory: “Conduct regulation has recently been introduced into South Africa. It manifests itself most patently in the establishment of the conduct regulator, being the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (“FSCA”) and in the introduction of “a consolidated, comprehensive and consistent regulatory framework for the conduct of financial institutions”, in the form of the Conduct of Financial Institutions (“COFI”) Act (currently still a draft Bill)”.

The National Treasury’s Explanatory Policy Paper accompanying the COFI Bill requires improvements in financial institutions’ culture, including ensuring appropriate governance frameworks; and that decision makers are directly and personally held accountable for weak governance and abusive practices by the institution. This will be a vital pillar in ensuring that financial institutions better serve South Africans.

Elliot observes: “The focus on accountability is not just a South African thing; the concept of holding individuals within financial institutions personally accountable for abusive practices is becoming a regulatory focus area around the world. The UK, Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore and the US have all implemented forms of individual accountability and more countries are likely to follow suit over the coming years.”

Apart from the restricted focus on financial institutions, I have some serious doubts whether legislation can ever be comprehensive and current enough to keep up with rapidly changing markets and schemes. The real problem lies much deeper: at a philosophical and moral level that for too long has assumed that wealth is generated mainly through the pursuit of maximum short term self-gain.

It is a grossly flawed interpretation of Adam Smith’s invisible hand. Legislation, fines and incarceration will be needed less when naming and shaming are severe punishment on their own.

That’s dependent on our moral compass.

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