Corporate Governance Reporting Practices in State Owned Enterprises In South Africa
Keywords:
Compliance, Public Sector Governance;, State Owned Enterprises, Corporate Governance Reporting, SOEs, South AfricaAbstract
Objectives: This paper analyzed corporate governance reporting practices in State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) in South Africa. Approach: The study used qualitative content analysis methodology to identify information for assessing the published annual reports of twenty-one purposively selected SOEs in South Africa. A checklist based on the corporate governance requirements of the King IV Report was used to identify the corporate governance reporting practices in SOEs. Results: The study found that most of the SOEs adhered to the King IV reporting recommendations. However, there are areas such leadership, ethics, corporate citizenship, value creation process, board evaluation and committee evaluation that detailed disclosure. Furthermore, the study found that there was inadequate guidance and oversight in terms of ethical standards and organizational culture. Implications: The study recommended that in areas where the entity has not fully complied, management should include a statement explaining the entity's commitment to comply with the required corporate governance practices and how it plans to address any weaknesses in the future. This study also recommended that the South African government should appoint board members with the necessary skills and competence to implement sound corporate governance reporting practices. Value: This research provides valuable insights into the corporate governance reporting practices of South Africa's SOEs, highlighting both adherence to and gaps in compliance with the King IV Report. It offers actionable recommendations for improving governance transparency and emphasizes the importance of skilled board appointments to strengthen oversight and ethical standards within SOEs.
References
*** (1994). King Report on Corporate Governance. Institute of Directors, Johannesburg.
*** (2001). Report on Corporate Governance for South Africa, draft 7 (Unpublished report). Institute of Directors,
Johannesburg.
*** (2021). OECD Corporate Governance Factbook 2021. OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development). Retrieved from: https://www.oecd.org/corporate/corporategovernance-factbook.htm. Date of access: 21 Jun.
Bello, U. & Abu, M. M. (2021). Shareholder and stakeholder theories: understanding corporate governance practice. Nile
Journal of Business and Economics, 17, 93-99.
Bronstein, V. & Olivier, M. (2015). An evaluation of the regulatory framework governing state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in
the republic of South Africa. Technical Report, The Presidency, Pretoria.
Dlamini, B. (2022). Adoption of Management Accounting Practices: Challenges and opportunities for small and medium-scale
enterprises in Zimbabwe. PhD Thesis, North-West University. Retrieved from:
https://repository.nwu.ac.za/handle/10394/42412.
Gumede, V., Bila, S., Biyase, M., Chauke, S., & Arogundade, S. (2024). Government and the Market: State-Owned Enterprises
in South Africa. In South African Economy: Trails and Possibilities, pp. 123-141. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland.
Johnson, G., Scholes, K., & Whittington, R. (2008). Exploring Corporate Strategy: Text and Cases, 8th Edition. Prentice Hall.
Malherbe, S. & Segal, N. (2001). Corporate Governance in South Africa. Development Centre Discussion Paper.
Maroun, W. & Cerbone, D. (2024). Corporate Governance in South Africa Vol. 2. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG.
Mudau, J. & Takalani, H. (2024). Commissions of Inquiry in South Africa: Towards an Enhanced Model of Ethics and
Accountability. African Journal of Peace and Conflict Studies (formerly Ubuntu: Journal of Conflict and Social
Transformation), 13(1), 51-68.
Oliveira, T. & Martins, M. F. (2010). Understanding e-business adoption across industries in European countries. Industrial
Management & Data Systems, 110, 1337-54.
Rossouw, G. J., Van der Watt, A., & Rossouw, D. M. (2002). Corporate governance in South Africa. Journal of Business
Ethics, 37, 289-302.
Stoelhorst, J. W. & Vishwanathan, P. (2024). Beyond primacy: A stakeholder theory of corporate governance. Academy of
Management Review, 49(1), 107-134.
Thabane T. & Snyman-Van Deventer, E. (2018). Pathological corporate governance deficiencies in South Africa’s state-owned
companies: a critical reflection. Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal, 21, 1-32.
Van der Walt, C., Dlamini, B. & Schutte, D. P. (2023). Exploring the Accounting Treatment of Exploration and Evaluation
Activities in the Extraction Industry in South Africa and Australia. International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues,
(6), 30-34.
Wang, Y. M., Wang, Y. S., & Yang, Y. F. (2010). Understanding the determinants of RFID adoption in the manufacturing
industry. Technological Forecasting & Social Change, 77(5), 803-815.
West, A. (2009). The ethics of corporate governance: A (South) African perspective. International Journal of Law and
Management, 51(1), 10-16.
Yunis, M., El-Kassar, A. N., & Tarhini, A. (2017). Impact of ICT-based innovations on organizational performance: The role
of corporate entrepreneurship, Journal of Enterprise Information Management, 30(1), 122-141.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Kada Phiri, Danie P. Schutte, Banele Dlamini
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
The author fully assumes the content originality and the holograph signature makes him responsible in case of trial.