一股一票的虚假承诺

Grant M. Hayden, Matthew T. Bodie
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引用次数: 4

摘要

股东民主已经开花结果。曾经奄奄一息的股东特权如今在收购竞争、合并决策和董事会监督中发挥了关键作用。然而,这次投票的机制在很大程度上仍未被理论化。本文运用投票权理论和社会选择理论对企业特许经营问题进行了研究。政治民主通常将投票权与个人对选举结果的兴趣程度联系起来。另一方面,企业民主倾向于将必要的机构利益界定得相当狭隘,从而将投票权仅限于股东。这种限制在假设股东对公司财富最大化具有相同的利益这一假设中找到了其合理性。这种同质性,它认为,最大化有效的偏好满意度。这种股东同质性的假设是错误的。例如,越来越清楚的是,股东在公司中有许多不同类型的利益。此外,员工、消费者和债权人等利益相关者在公司治理中也有利益,而这些利益目前还没有通过现有的合同制度获得。此外,从股东同质性假设中得出的许多结论,要么是基于对阿罗定理的过时理解,要么在某些情况下,与它们声称体现的标准经济理论完全不一致。因此,企业投票计划是其更强大的政治对手的乏味反映。本文认为,公司法学者应该承认股东投票理论的弱点,并研究将公司参与者的偏好转化为治理结构的新方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The False Promise of One Share, One Vote
Shareholder democracy has blossomed. The once moribund shareholder franchise is now critical in takeover contests, merger decisions, and board oversight. However, the mechanisms of this vote remain largely undertheorized. In this Article, we use voting rights and social choice theory to develop a new approach to the corporate franchise. Political democracies typically tie the right to vote to the level of a person's interest in the outcome of the election. Corporate democracies, on the other hand, tend to define the requisite institutional interest quite narrowly, and thus restrict the right to vote to shareholders alone. This restriction has found its justification in the assumption that shareholders have a homogeneous interest in corporate wealth maximization. Such homogeneity, it is argued, maximizes efficient preference satisfaction. This assumption of shareholder homogeneity is false. It is becoming increasing clear, for example, that shareholders have many different types of interests in a corporation. In addition, stakeholders such as employees, consumers, and creditors also have interests in corporate governance that are not currently captured through existing contractual regimes. Moreover, many of the conclusions drawn from the assumption of shareholder homogeneity are either based on dated understandings of Arrow's Theorem or, in some cases, are flat out inconsistent with the standard economic theory that they purport to embody. As a result, corporate voting schemes are sterile reflections of their more robust political counterparts. The Article argues that corporate law scholars should acknowledge the weaknesses of shareholder voting theory and should examine new ways of translating the preferences of corporate participants into a governance structure.
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