Chris Hughes, Columnist

Wirecard Scandal Puts German Boards on the Spot

For most of its existence, the company’s supervisory board didn’t have an audit or risk committee.

We’re in trouble.

Photographer: Tobias Hase/picture alliance via Getty Images

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One more item for Germany’s to-do list following the Wirecard scandal: Reassess the country’s two-tier board system.

German companies are run by executives on a management board. Above them sits a supervisory board of non-executives, whose explicit duties are appointing, supervising and advising the managers. A longstanding question is whether these supervisory boards properly protect investors’ interests.