World  Business and Economic Analysis 

                Iran can become first destination for foreign tourists: French envoy            

           

                Tehran, Sept 15, IRNA – French Ambassador to Iran Francis Foucher said on Tuesday that Iran as an exceptional country can become the first destination for foreign tourists.                 

                He told the signing ceremony of a cooperation agreement between Iran's Financial Tourism Group and French Akor International Hoteliering Group at Imam Khomeini International Airport that presence of the French entity in Iran will pave the way for other French small and big enterprises to participate in Iran's different economic sections. He said that after a lapse of two months since Vienna deal between Iran and G5+1, conditions for two French hoteliering companies were prepared to come to Iran to contribute to the management of Imam Khomeini International Airport's four- and five-star hotels. Meanwhile, Managing Director of Akor International Hoteliering Group Sebastian Bazan said that signing the deal will make Akor hotels a good partner for Iranian friends. 'Iran boasts of a very rich culture and civilization and its unique architecture have attracted many tourists to the country,' he said. 'We have started our cooperation with Iran with high self-confidence,' he said, hoping that the agreement will help further introduce the Iran to the tourists.

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Spanish firms ready to invest in Iran’s petchem sector
 

TEHRAN- Juan Ramon Duran, the general manager of Spain’s Sercobe Association, announced Spanish companies’ preparedness to invest in Iran’s petrochemical sector.
   

He made the remarks in a meeting between a number of Sercobe’s representatives and National Iranian Petrochemical Company (NPC)’s Managing Director Abbas She’ri Moqaddam and some other NPC officials in Tehran, the Shana News Agency reported on Tuesday.


Duran said Spanish companies are very hopeful that the sanctions are lifted against Iran as soon as possible; so that they could cooperate in implementation of petrochemical projects in the Islamic Republic.


“We intend to make long-term contracts with Iran in different petrochemical fields. I believe that cooperation with Iran will be successful for us”, he stated.


She’ri Moqaddam, for his part, welcomed the Spanish companies’ eagerness to invest in Iran’s petrochemical sector and said Iran-Spain cooperation brings a bright future for the both sides.


There is a positive approach toward Sercobe in Iran and NPC trusts the association; the officials said, adding that when the sanctions are removed against Iran the companies which have created such trust in the country will be attached priority for cooperation.


Addressing the same meeting, Amir-Hassan Fallah, the NPC advisor for finance and investment development, said: “We believe that many projects in Iran could be completed through Spanish companies’ direct investment. Spain is among a few number of European countries which remained beside Iranian petrochemical industry in the sanctions time; therefore, the ground is prepared for the mutual trust between Iran and Spain.”


In the end of meeting, the Spanish representatives announced that they will participate with their full capabilities in the next year’s edition of Iran Petrochemical Forum (IPF).


SERCOBE is the National Association of Manufacturers of Capital Goods, with one hundred and thirty individual members and five collective members, representing more than four hundred companies and special groups related to design, engineering, production, maintenance, installation and recycling of capital goods.


In April She’ri Moqaddam said that some $30 billion of investment opportunities have been identified in Iran’s petrochemical sector, which will be certainly welcomed by European and Asian investors after the sanctions against the country are lifted.  

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Business & Finance

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Lucy P. Marcus

Lucy P. Marcus, founder and CEO of Marcus Venture Consulting, Ltd., is Professor of Leadership and Governance at IE Business School and a non-executive board director of Atlantia SpA.

AUG 19, 2015

The Better Corporation

LONDON – Around the world, the corporate governance landscape is shifting, as efforts to improve business practices and policies gain support and momentum. The wave of reform has become visible everywhere – from tough new regulations in Japan to sovereign wealth funds like Norway’s Norges Bank Investment Management taking a more active approach to their investments – and it is certain to continue to rise.

Three factors are driving these developments. First, today’s deep economic uncertainty has broadened ordinary people’s awareness of the influence that companies have on politics, policy, and their own daily lives. And, as I have noted previously, people are not only paying greater attention; they also have more power than ever before to make their voices heard.

Second, there has been a burgeoning awareness among governments that economic growth requires a proactive regulatory approach. Robust and resilient economies need strong businesses, and to build strong businesses, governments must play a role in ensuring high-integrity oversight of business activity. Company stewardship and country stewardship are increasingly linked, and authorities now recognize that paying to ensure good governance now is far less costly (both financially and politically) than paying for the consequences of bad governance later.

In Japan, the Financial Services Agency enacted a Stewardship Code in 2014, with a Corporate Governance Code from the Tokyo Stock Exchange entering into force this June. By creating a more equal environment among shareholders, ensuring more disclosure and transparency, specifying the responsibilities of company boards, and requiring outside independent directors on company boards, the codes enshrine changes that make Japan more attractive for foreign investors. More generally, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has emphasized that good corporate governance is critical to long-term economic growth and prosperity.

Toshiba’s recent accounting scandal – the company was found to have inflated its profits by ¥151.8 billion ($1.2 billion) over several years since 2008 – presents an opportunity for Japan’s government to demonstrate its seriousness about the new regulations. Toshiba CEO Hisao Tanaka and other senior executives have had to resign; the interim CEO apologized to Abe’s office; Norio Sasaki, the company’s vice chairman and former CEO, has quit his posts on government panels; and the former chairman of Toshiba’s audit committee has stepped down from the government accounting panel.

In the United States, the Securities and Exchange Commission enacted a rule at the beginning of August requiring public companies to disclose the pay gap between workers and CEOs. Corporate behavior and governance has emerged as a campaign issue for US presidential candidates. Hillary Clinton gave a speech at the end of July decrying “quarterly capitalism” that chases short-term growth at the expense of sustainable business development, as well as addressing the exponential growth of CEO pay, and the need for a minimum-wage increase.

The European Union and its member states are also taking an increasingly active approach to corporate governance, including regulations concerning boardroom diversity. Italy, France, Spain, Norway, and others have all enacted boardroom gender quotas, with companies required to fill 30-40% of independent board seats with women. The latest example can be found in Germany, where, after much debate, new quotas require that from 2016 large companies fill 30% of non-executive board seats with women.

The third, and perhaps most important, factor underpinning recent changes in corporate governance has been the sharp rise in cross-border investing. Sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, global investment banks, and hedge funds do not invest only in their own backyard. They scour the planet looking for places to put their money, and they expect companies that receive it to play by rational rules.

The Olympus scandal of 2011-2012 – when investigations in Japan, the United Kingdom, and the US revealed that company executives falsified accounts to hide losses of ¥117.7 billion – is a watershed example of a traditional closed corporate culture coming up against international scrutiny. As the full extent of the cover-up was revealed, foreign investors, like GIC Private Limited (Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund), rebelled.

Singapore sold nearly all of its 2% stake almost immediately, and other foreign investors and analysts reacted similarly. It was a turning point for Japan, as the country’s clubby investment culture came up against global transparency and accounting standards. Things have not been the same since, either for Japan or for companies’ understanding of the expectations and influence of international investors.

International investors are in a unique position to encourage, or even enforce, global best practices in corporate governance. If such investors show that they are willing to withdraw financing, they will gain real influence in bringing about sustainable change – to the benefit of us all.

This is especially true if investors are guided by principles that go beyond financial returns. Global funds that uphold high ethical standards concerning labor practices and environmental protections are safeguarding the global ecosystem on which they, and the rest of us, depend. As they establish and implement such principles, the resulting momentum has been changing corporate governance and behavior across industries and regions.

This is evident from several high-profile examples. CalPERS (the California Public Employees’ Retirement System), a $300 billion pension fund, has published its corporate governance principles, which include boardroom diversity, fair labor practices, and environmental protection. Norges Bank Investment Management, Norway’s $870 billion sovereign wealth fund (the largest in the world), has also pushed for changing governance rules, including separating the role of chief executive and chairman and better reporting by companies on how they are addressing climate change.

The shift in emphasis on best-practice corporate governance is real, and it is here to stay. It comes from people finding and raising their voices, from politicians recognizing the importance of corporate governance for sustainable economic growth, and from influential investors putting genuine pressure on companies to change their behavior. Companies and boards ignore this trend at their peril.

https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/corporate-governance-reform-worldwide-by-lucy-p--marcus-2015-08

Read more at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/corporate-governance-reform-worldwide-by-lucy-p--marcus-2015-08#3OvDzU6WseG4fWS0.99

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