Asleep at the wheel? Governing Australia’s Institutions
On May 1st this year, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA} released its Prudential Inquiry into the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA). This report, into a formerly trusted Australian institution, was commissioned followed a number of damaging incidents of misconduct and regulatory breaches. The review identified, among a range of issues, inadequate governance oversight and highlighted the lack of board challenge of management reporting. The report stated:
How does a board of our largest bank composed of leaders from the commercial world get it so wrong? A common starting point in reviewing governance failures is to examine the composition of the board. Governance principles suggest a range of board member skills and experience provides the optimal mix to ensure a diversity of perspectives is brought to the analysis of organisational performance, risk and strategic direction. Research undertaken to examine governance in another trusted sector, Australian public hospitals, highlights some interesting findings in relation to skills and other key factors influencing effective governance.
Governance is more than board members
When we think about governance we often think about boards. However, board members are only half of the equation. Governance is an exchange between board members and executives. Boards rely on management to provide them with reports that give a transparent, balanced view of the current status of the organisation. The APRA report highlighted that a scarcity of executives skilled in risk management contributed to some of the issues at CBA. Risk reporting to the board was found to be deficient. Similarly, in the study of public hospitals, executive skills in understanding governance, and reporting requirements at that level, were found to influence governance effectiveness. Management reporting to the board was found to vary greatly between hospitals reflecting different understandings of governance. At some hospitals reporting was focussed on providing the board with assurance on meeting compliance requirements through, for example, departmental performance measures. At other boards, a comprehensive range of information was used to, not only provide compliance assurance, but to understand the quality of services provided and the experience of patients. The APRA review found that the CBA Board received positive aggregated customer satisfaction metrics but did not receive any information or analysis on customer complaints which would have provided insight into some emerging risks.
Skills
Board directors are often selected for skills in areas such as finance, business, politics and media. The public hospital research found that while there is often a focus on getting clinicians on boards, the real value in having directors with clinical experience was not in their technical skills but in their broad understanding of how the healthcare sector works. This finding rings true to the CBA board where relatively few directors or executives had banking experience which gave them an in depth understanding of the sector.
The hospital study also found leadership skills were critical for both board members and management. While this sounds obvious for those who direct and control powerful organisations, the APRA report found that executives were appointed who had not ‘peaked in their career’ and had less skills in ‘reflection, humility, learning and adaptive capacity’. The hospital study echoes this and found board directors and executive staff were often appointed primarily for their technical skills and not leadership and governance skills. Leadership skills were found to be essential in promoting challenge and adequate reflection on organisational and governance performance.
The need for reflection
A key finding from the study of public hospitals was the value of critical reflection. Regular review of reporting frameworks were essential in ensuring reports addressed key governance responsibilities. Similarly, regular reviews of, not only board effectiveness, but board committee effectiveness were important. Board committees do much of the heavy lifting of governance. Yet, few hospital boards took the time to examine whether these committee were working well and whether they added value to the board. Finally, reflection on evidence arising from internal and external reviews of their own and others performance was also found to be important. The APRA review found the CBA board and executive were insular and lacked critical reflection. Committees were found to be underperforming and the board did not learn from its own or others mistakes.
Governance effectiveness requires board and senior executives skilled in governance and leadership who create regular opportunities for debate, challenge and reflection on current organisation and governance performance using a broad range of data and evidence.
About the Author:
Alison Brown is a consultant specialising in healthcare governance and clinical governance. Alison has extensive experience in the Victorian health systems working with clinicians, managers and boards on developing appropriate systems and processes to support effective governance. Alison has a background as a clinician, quality manager, researcher and project manager. In addition to consultancy work, Alison is currently conducting a study, as a PhD candidate at the University of Melbourne, investigating the characteristics of effective governance of healthcare quality. Alison has a Master of Public Health and has undertaken the company directors course at the Australian Institute of Company Directors. Alison Brown is contactable via email to alisonb2@student.unimelb.edu.au.