Ministry of Justice announces Bribery Act guidance

-

The Ministry of Justice has published the long awaited finalised guidance on “adequate procedures” under the Bribery Act 2010. The Act will come into force on 1 July 2011.

Neill Blundell, partner and Head of Fraud at law firm Eversheds, commented: “The Bribery Act creates a new criminal corporate offence of failing to prevent bribery by a person associated with it, this includes employees, agents and intermediaries. In order to establish a defence to such a charge, an organisation will need to be able to demonstrate it has adequate anti-bribery procedures in place. The guidance published today is aimed at assisting organisations to understand what will constitute “adequate procedures”.

Mr Blundell continued: “The guidance remains non-prescriptive and indicates that “adequate procedures” should be built around six principles; proportionality, commitment to bribery prevention, risk assessment, due diligence, communication and monitoring and review. It is up to each organisation to implement policies and procedures that will minimise bribery risk taking into account their main risk areas of the organisation and its global presence. The higher the risks the more an organisation will need to do.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

“Under the Act, facilitation payments remain illegal and the guidance does not seek to minimise this fact. However, the guidance does provide comfort in the area of gifts and entertainment. The guidance carries a clear message that in order for hospitality to be considered bribery, the prosecution will need to show that it was given with the intention to induce improper conduct from the other party with regard to their business, trade or profession.

“The guidance states that the government recognises that bona fide hospitality, promotion or expenditure seeking to improve a company’s image, present products or establish cordial relations is a legitimate and an important part of doing business. Such behaviour is not intended to be criminalised.

“Ensuring the above criteria are properly followed and implemented will assist organisations should they need to prove that they have taken the bribery risk seriously and implemented “adequate procedures” to prevent it occurring. For many companies this will mean new policies, new or improved training throughout the organisation including the introduction of on-line training tools for all employees and intermediaries and a more thorough approach to tackling the risk of bribery in the UK and abroad, all approved at a board level.”

Latest news

Climate advisers call for maximum workplace temperatures as UK heat risks grow

Climate advisers have urged ministers to introduce maximum workplace temperature protections as heatwaves increasingly threaten productivity and staff wellbeing.

Emily Mikailli: Women’s careers have moved on — the career ladder hasn’t

There is still a belief that careers should follow a familiar upward path, but it was never built around the realities of modern women.

Weight-loss jabs linked to steep fall in workplace sickness absence

Weight-loss injections may reduce workplace sickness absence and ease pressure on GP services, new obesity research suggests.

Iran conflict and rising costs push UK job vacancies to five-year low

Falling vacancies and weaker payroll numbers are adding to concerns that economic uncertainty and rising business costs are cooling recruitment activity.
- Advertisement -

Public fears AI job losses as entry-level roles come under pressure

Most workers fear artificial intelligence will destroy jobs and damage opportunities for young people as businesses accelerate AI adoption.

Government launches major overhaul of mental health care with focus on prevention

Ministers have launched plans for a major overhaul of mental health care with greater focus on prevention, workplaces and early intervention.

Must read

Leanne Maskell: What HR can do to protect neurodivergent employees from workplace harassment and bullying

The fact that one in five neurodivergent employees experience harassment or bullying at work should ring serious alarm bells.

Mark Leisegang: What HR leaders can learn from Six Nations rugby players

As we all sit back on our sofas to watch the Six Nations Championship, have we ever considered what it’s actually like to be on the field?
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you