SCA loses
seven executives after revelations that it used corporate planes to fly board
members’ relatives to hunting lodge and sporting events
The Guardian, David Crouch in Gothenburg, 11 February 2015
Jan Johansson has stepped down from his role as chief executive of SCA. Photograph: TT News Agency/Reuters |
A
corruption scandal in Sweden centred on extravagant corporate perks and private
jets has now cost the jobs of seven senior executives.
Jan
Johansson, chief executive of SCA, a forestry group and the world’s largest
maker of incontinence products, resigned on Tuesday after coming under
increasing pressure after reports that wives, children and even pets of board
members had traveled on corporate jets. The flights included trips to a company
hunting lodge, Formula One races, the World Cup and the Olympics. On one
occasion, Svenska Dagbladet reported, a plane had flown empty from Sweden’s far
north to pick up a wallet that an executive had forgotten.
The
revelations have demonstrated an extravagance at the top of a country that
still prides itself on egalitarian values. It has also lifted the lid on a
secretive world of corporate perks in a society that has embraced globalisation
but is still uncomfortable with ostentatious displays of wealth and privilege.
It has sucked in one of the country’s largest investors, two large banks and
accountants PwC, while attracting the attention of prosecutors and financial
regulators.
Johansson
is seen in business circles as a CEO who “lays golden eggs” – SCA reported
record profits only last month. He resigned on Tuesday night, saying
investigations into the use of corporate jets were diverting his attention from
managing the company. He leaves with two years’ salary, worth 22m krona
(£1.7m).
SCA’s
commercial success appears to have been accompanied by an increasingly
extravagant corporate culture at odds with its stated ethics. In 2013 the
company said it had “zero tolerance for all forms of corruption and unethical
business practices”.
Attention
has focused on a hunting lodge built by the company at a cost of 100m krona
(£7.7m), according to media estimates, on prime elk-hunting land in a remote
and beautiful part of central Sweden. According to business daily Dagens
Industri, the lodge was “worth its weight in gold” as a venue for entertaining
potential business partners.
But the
leader of the trade union for SCA’s employees has viewed it rather differently,
comparing management’s behavior to Vladimir Putin’s Russia. The company has
said is considering selling the hunting lodge.
SCA also
announced the resignation of its vice-president, who had come under fire for
flying with his wife on a company jet, while chairman Sverker Martin-Löf
resigned last month after it emerged that his son had been used as a financial
adviser on business deals.
Martin-Löf
was also forced to step down from all his other board positions on major
Swedish companies, including the chairmanship of Industrivärden, a vast
investment house that, together with the Wallenberg family, controls more than half the Stockholm stock exchange.
Industrivärden
owns controlling stakes in companies such as Volvo, Ericsson and Handelsbanken,
one of Sweden’s biggest banks.
In total,
the four big companies implicated in the private jets scandal – SCA,
Industrivärden, Handelsbanken and steel firm SSAB – have now lost their
chairmen. Three of of the companies have lost their chief executives, although
some have been reshuffled, rather than sacked.
The scale
of the scandal has raised questions about Sweden’s distinctive model of
corporate ownership, with large and active shareholders, and an emphasis on
long-term investment rather than short-term share price gains. But
cross-holdings between SCA and Industrivärden meant that executives were also
signing off on each other’s expenses.
Sweden’s
national anti-corruption unit last month began an investigation into SCA’s use
of corporate jets. Sweden’s financial supervisory authority is also
investigating whether the chief executive of Nordea Bank acted improperly by
flying to the SCA hunting lodge. SCA banks with Nordea.
The company’s
auditors, PwC, are also facing scrutiny for taking part in the hunting trips.
Sweden’s accountancy association said in a statement: “It is very inappropriate
that the auditor participates in an elk hunt that the client company organises
and hosts.”
The
behavior by SCA executives and their associates would be at the limits of
corruption law in other countries, said Carl Rosen, head of Sweden’s
Shareholder’s Association. He condemned an “unholy alliance” between large
shareholders and company executives, insisting that companies should not be
free to spend unlimited sums on corporate travel and entertainment. He added:
“If the message is that you have to go to a hunting lodge in a corporate jet to
do business in Sweden, that’s bad.”
Swedish
steel company SSAB, whose executives also traveled on board SCA’s jets,
defended the practice of inviting clients on hunting trips. “Our customer hunts
are a tradition. I have chosen to continue with them,” CEO Martin Lindqvist
told Swedish media this week.
Sweden’s
main business daily last month called on the country’s capitalists to think
about their legitimacy in the eyes of the wider population. In an editorial,
Dagens Industri said: “Royalty that celebrates its privileges in unsuitable
company is living dangerously, but a monarch who clearly contributes to the
development of society can bridge the gap between a culture of democracy and
the right to inherit the throne.”
SCA said it
had now changed its policy in regards to relatives using business aviation travel,
even when there is no extra cost to the company. It also said that business
aviation would no longer be used for corporate hospitality.
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