Singapore’s Puzzling Embrace of Shareholder Stewardship: A Successful Secret

Dan W. Puchniak, Samantha S. Tang
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

In the wake of the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, the UK created the first stewardship code which was designed to transform its rationally passive institutional investors into actively engaged shareholders. In the UK corporate governance context, this idea made sense. Institutional investors collectively own a sizable majority of the shares in most of the UK’s listed companies. In turn, if the UK stewardship code could incentivize them to effectively monitor management – to act as “good shareholder stewards” – the managerial short-termism and excessive risk-taking, which were identified as contributors to the GFC, could be avoided. The UK’s idea to adopt a stewardship code sparked a global shareholder stewardship movement. Unsurprisingly, Singapore as a corporate governance leader in Asia, adopted a stewardship code. Based on a superficial textual analysis, the Singapore Code appears to be a near carbon-copy of the UK Code. However, this article, which provides the first in-depth comparative analysis of stewardship in Singapore, demonstrates how Singapore has turned the UK model of stewardship on its head. Rather than enhancing the shareholder voice of institutional investors, shareholder stewardship has been used in Singapore as a mechanism for entrenching its successful state-controlled and family-controlled system of corporate governance. This development has been entirely overlooked by prominent international observers and would be beyond the wildest imaginations of the original architects of the UK Code. Viewed through an Anglo-American lens, this use of “stewardship” may suggest that Singapore has engaged in a corporate governance sham. However, we argue the opposite: it appears to be a secret to Singapore’s continued corporate governance success and provides a much-needed Asian (as opposed to Anglo-American) model of good corporate governance for Asia.
新加坡令人费解地接受股东管理:一个成功的秘密
在2008年全球金融危机之后,英国制定了第一部管理守则,旨在将理性被动的机构投资者转变为积极参与的股东。在英国公司治理的背景下,这种想法是有道理的。机构投资者共同持有英国多数上市公司的大部分股份。反过来,如果英国的管理守则能够激励他们有效地监督管理层——充当“优秀的股东管家”——管理层的短期主义和过度冒险行为——被认为是全球金融危机的推动者——就可以避免。英国采纳管理守则的想法,引发了一场全球股东管理运动。不出所料,新加坡作为亚洲公司治理的领导者,采用了管理守则。根据肤浅的文本分析,《新加坡法典》似乎几乎是《英国法典》的翻版。然而,这篇文章首次对新加坡的管理进行了深入的比较分析,展示了新加坡是如何将英国的管理模式彻底转变的。在新加坡,股东管理并没有增强机构投资者的股东话语权,而是被用作巩固其成功的国家控股和家族控制的公司治理体系的机制。这一发展完全被著名的国际观察家所忽视,也超出了《英国法典》最初的设计者们最疯狂的想象。从英美视角来看,这种“管理”一词的使用可能表明,新加坡参与了一场公司治理骗局。然而,我们的观点恰恰相反:它似乎是新加坡公司治理持续成功的秘诀,并为亚洲提供了一种急需的亚洲(而不是英美)良好公司治理模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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