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IFC helps Georgian companies improve corporate governance and increase profitability

Business Materials 22 January 2011 14:04 (UTC +04:00)

Georgia, Tbilisi, Jan. 22 / Trend N.Kirtzkhalia /

IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, successfully completed its Georgia Corporate Governance project, and summarized the results of its program to help Georgian companies improve their corporate governance practices, the structure reported.

Following principles of responsibility, accountability, and transparency enables firms to become more profitable and thus attract investment.

The IFC project helped improve the legal environment regulating corporate governance issues, and facilitated adoption of a voluntary Corporate Governance Code by the Association of Banks of Georgia. IFC delivered seminars and workshops on legal and financial aspects of corporate governance, individual consultations, and a specially designed Pilot Program for select companies and banks. Twenty-one companies and banks improved 50 policies/procedures, and all of them reported improved performance as a result of making corporate governance improvements.

IFC recently published the Georgia Corporate Governance Manual, which provides a comprehensive overview of Georgia's regulatory requirements related to corporate governance.

The project presented the manual to the key counterparts during the project closing ceremony on January 21.

"Good corporate governance is one of the key preconditions for attracting investors, domestic as well as international," said Maia Tevzadze, Project Manager for IFC Georgia Corporate Governance Project.

From 2006 to January 2011, IFC Georgia Corporate Governance Project was run in partnership with BP and its oil and gas co-venturers and the Canadian International Development Agency.

IFC's cumulative investments in Georgia since 1995 total nearly $500 million in 35 projects across a variety of sectors.

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