Sebi Chief Ajay Tyagi (above) earlier this month said the regulator will have a dialogue with the government on compliance of public sector companies with certain regulations
Board composition Several public sector companies have been non-compliant on other rules as well.
According to data from Prime Database, only six of the 42 state-owned companies surveyed had the required number of independent directors.
Three of them — Oil India, Madras Fertilisers and HMT— did not have a single independent director. Among the other companies that do not have enough independents on their boards are ONGC, BHEL, NTPC and Coal India, with vacancies ranging between one and three.
Sebi mandates at least half the board must be independent, and if there is a non-executive chairman, at least one-third of the board should be independent.
Public sector companies have also been non-compliant of the requirement to have at least one woman director on their boards. Nine public sector companies have been in violation of this rule. Of these, three have never had a woman director since the rule came into force in April 2015. Bharat Petroleum, Chennai Petroleum, GAIL, Indian Oil, ONGC and PowerGrid are among the companies that did not have a female board member as on July 17, according to Prime Database.
According to the procedure laid down by the government for appointment of “non-official” directors, the process is initiated by the company by recommending three eligible names. Then a search panel headed by the secretary of department of personnel and training chooses the candidate. There is a detailed eligibility criteria in terms of age, education and experience for various categories of candidates such as retired bureaucrats, former PSU executives, academicians and professionals. This elaborate process, say experts, comes in the way of quick replacements when vacancy arises.
In a written reply to a question in the Lok Sabha in 2015, Finance and Corporate Affairs Minister Arun Jaitley said, the panel had recommended 516 names for filling up 457 positions of non-official directors in 212 Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs). These included 172 ex-government servants, 136 ex-CMDs/directors of CPSEs, 87 professors/academicians and 114 professionals.
Pranav Haldea, managing director, Prime Database says, “There is no point in having a regulation and having so many non-compliant companies.” “A better option might be to exempt public sector companies from these rules, given the complicated process involved in appointing the directors.”