On Public Versus Private Provision of Corporate Law

Gillian K. Hadfield, E. Talley
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引用次数: 40

Abstract

Law in modern market societies serves both democratic and economic functions. In its economic function, law is a service, a means of enhancing the value of transactions and organizations. Yet modern market economies continue to rely on the state, rather than the market, to provide this service. This article investigates whether private provision of law may be superior to public provision. We look in particular at corporate law, where there is a substantial literature exploring the efficiency implications of "regulatory competition" and compare this competition with market competition between private providers. Drawing from the well-known framework of spatial models of imperfect competition, we argue that while neither public nor private competition may lead to the optimal corporate law regimes, there are at least some reasons to believe that private provision may be preferable. Specifically, we present a model that demonstrates when regulatory competition is likely to produce widespread emulation and little innovation. Private competition, in contrast, is more likely to lead to greater "product" differentiation, which benefits heterogeneous consumers of corporate law services in the short term. Moreover, such differentiation also has long-term benefits, as providers are able to "learn" more about business organizations' demand-side characteristics and can thus tailor their services to business needs more effectively. Copyright 2006, Oxford University Press.
论公司法的公共条款与私人条款
现代市场社会的法律既有民主功能,又有经济功能。就其经济功能而言,法律是一种服务,一种提高交易和组织价值的手段。然而,现代市场经济继续依靠国家而不是市场来提供这种服务。本文探讨私法规定是否可能优于公法规定。我们特别关注公司法,其中有大量文献探讨了“监管竞争”的效率含义,并将这种竞争与私人供应商之间的市场竞争进行了比较。根据众所周知的不完全竞争空间模型框架,我们认为,尽管公共和私人竞争都不会导致最优的公司法制度,但至少有一些理由相信私人提供可能更可取。具体来说,我们提出了一个模型,证明监管竞争可能会产生广泛的模仿和很少的创新。相比之下,私人竞争更有可能导致更大的“产品”差异化,这在短期内有利于公司法服务的异质消费者。此外,这种差异化也有长期的好处,因为提供商能够更多地“了解”业务组织的需求侧特征,从而可以更有效地根据业务需求定制服务。牛津大学出版社版权所有。
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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