A larger number of companies are paying directors sitting-fees of Rs 1 lakh, the highest permitted under the rules, per board meeting than was the case before the pandemic.
The share of Nifty 100 companies that pay their directors Rs 1 lakh per board meeting has risen from 37.1 per cent in 2018-19 to 41.4 per cent in 2021-22, according to an analysis of data from the Excellence Enablers’ Survey on Corporate Governance (3rd edition).
The report is an initiative by former Securities and Exchange Board of India chairman M Damodaran and chairperson of Excellence Enablers.
Damodaran said: “Directors are compensated also through a share in profits. Much of this profit share is given to promoters as commission and a limited amount is paid to independent directors. Most enterprises do not set aside anything near the ceiling amount of 1 per cent of net profit for such compensation. No company is anywhere near that.”
Additional data from the report showed the majority of the Nifty 100 companies had fewer than seven meetings a year in 2018-19. There were 51 companies that had four-six meetings a year in 2018-19, and 49 had seven or more. This reversed by 2021-22. Only 44 companies had four-six meetings in 2021-22. The number with seven meetings or more rose to 56. The number of companies with more than 10 board meetings a year has gone up from 19 to 25.
Talks with directors suggest some of this might have to do with easier norms for board meetings after the pandemic. Virtual meetings are allowed, which precludes travelling for people who may be away from company headquarters.
Independent Director Alok C Churiwala said the number of meetings might also reckon with increasing responsibilities of board members. Many may now proactively seek additional information from companies to fulfil their roles effectively, leading to more engagement than before.
“Directors will demand more meetings,” he said.
The growing size of companies counts towards more being paid to directors, said another person who serves on company boards.
Rising compliance burden has meant more instances of company matters being reported to the board, and additional responsibilities have come with more pay, according to the person.
“Overall remuneration has gone up,” he said.