Dysfunctional boards should be weaned off implementation: Ambachtsheer

In November the International Centre for Pension Management at the Rotman School, University of Toronto will launch its board effectiveness program, which director Keith Ambachtsheer hopes will help overcome the dysfunctionality of pension fund boards – which have a desire to implement rather than oversee.

The governance function in the pension world is often dysfunctional, according to director of ICPM, Keith Ambachtsheer (pictured), and to put his money where his mouth is, the Rotman School at the University of Toronto will launch a board effectiveness program for pension funds this November.

The program will ask attendees to submit in advance the top three burning issues their boards face, and those answers will then help form a practical guide for attendees.

The program will look at the functionality of boards, examining when they get stuck and why, as well as the right way for a board to act around strategy, planning and execution.

“There is often not a clear distinction of what the board does in our space. This comes from the history of trustees having personal responsibility which has translated into ‘I need to know everything’, this is not possible and dysfunctional.”

Sponsored Content

“The board should have an oversight function not implementation.”

Ambachtsheer says it’s all just “Druckersism” referring to the work of Peter Drucker who is often quoted as the man who invented management.

“The role of the board, in any industry and company, should be oversight, asking questions of why we’re on track to achieving our mission, and have the competence to understand the answers,” he says. “Pension fund boards are the same as any other organisational board.”

The board governance program has been broadly offered by the Rotman School since 2003 and more than 1500 individuals have gone through the program.

This program has been tweaked to make the content pension-fund specific, and uniquely will have an international participation, which Ambachtsheer says will bring together people “who do the same thing and understand the value of people networking with each other”.

Broadly speaking Ambachtsheer says there are two ways to put a board together. The first is that board members are representative of a particular group; and the second is the Drucker model where the board must understand enough about the organisation it is governing to ask the right questions.

But he says the right board composition is not either one of these, it’s both.

Ambachtsheer points to the example of Ontario Teachers Pension Plan as a case study of good governance. When Claude Lamoureux was approached to be its founding chief executive there was a greenfield opportunity to get it right, he says.

When the pension fund’s first chair, Gerry Bouey, the retired governor of the Bank of Canada, approached Lamoureux for the position, he said he would consider it given a number of conditions, so the story goes.

He wanted to be part of an organisation that was at arm’s length, had a grasp of governance matters, sensible investment beliefs, the right compensation model and mix of directors.

Ontario teachers and the Ontario government agreed to these demands, and to the kinds of skill sets required from people to sit on the board.

“However you measure OTPP they shoot the lights out, because they got the model right at the beginning,” he says.

Ambachtsheer is adamant that to attract the required professionalism a board demands, its members must be paid, which would be in the order of $30,000 to $60,000 depending on the committee work.

But this is not to say that these “professionals” aren’t still representatives of certain groups of the fund’s beneficiaries.

“Board members should be professional people. They can still be selected by representative groups, such as unions or employees, but it is a valuable job and needs to be paid to reflect that.”

For information about the governance program, click here.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Bauer to head Rotman programs

The former head of research at ABP, and renowned pension academic, Rob Bauer, has been appointed associate director, programs, at the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Smaller hedge funds suffer in insto-driven market

Smaller hedge fund managers, which may well include some of the best performers, are struggling for inflows due to the institutionalisation of the hedge fund industry, new research from Preqin indicates.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Even the smartest guys can do stupid stuff

From recently compiled figures, there also seems to be a big disconnect developing between what pension funds are doing and what mutual funds are doing.

Investors desert Egypt’s unsettled fare rows

Civil unrest in Egypt, in particular, and other Middle-eastern and some African countries has been blamed for causing further investor outflows from emerging markets in recent weeks.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS renovates real estate portfolio

CalPERS will separate its real estate assets into legacy and new portfolios, as part of a new strategic plan for the asset class that more accurately reflects its evolved role as a result of the fund’s recent asset liability study.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Funds brave-up for risk: Towers Watson

It’s not really news but it’s comforting to have your observations confirmed when the annual Global Pension Asset Study is published. The Towers Watson report for 2010 shows a hiatus in the swing away from equities, stronger growth in Asia-Pacific than elsewhere, and a greater focus on risk by the major funds in the world’s

Previous