跨国公司治理:技术现状和21世纪的挑战

D. Katelouzou, Peer C. Zumbansen
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引用次数: 3

摘要

本章将公司治理作为公司法的一个子领域进行探讨,公司治理传统上植根于一个国家的法律经济文化,并在很大程度上反映了历史上形成的产业发展结构、公司所有权和特定的市场监管水平。公司治理规则旨在满足投资者的“市场预期”,这反映了股东财富最大化作为公司最终业绩衡量标准的重要性日益上升,投资者可以轻松点击鼠标,向本国企业注入或移除关键金融资产。在这种背景下,公司治理开始推动并日益超越国家特定文化和公司法历史经验的限制,相反,成为一个激烈竞争的跨国监管领域,竞争公司制度和规范基础设施的愿景,以寻求创造最有利的条件,在动荡的市场中吸引资本。这一转变发生的同时,西方后工业社会自1980年代初以来的监管改革已经开始显著地将公共服务提供和国家组织的老年安全保障、获得保健服务或教育的框架转移到市场领域。今天的公司治理实验室是一个跨国力场,由许多不同的国家和非国家行为体争夺,包括各国政府以及联合国或经合组织等国际组织,但也有私人行为体,如机构投资者,从银行到对冲基金,以及半公开的专家委员会、智库和咨询公司。与此同时,在经历了2001年和2008/09年两次具有里程碑意义的金融危机,以及人权、性别平等和环保组织同时对企业施加的越来越大的压力之后,有关公司治理的辩论似乎再次发生了转变。这一次,在公司治理主题下讨论的问题的多样性指向了更广泛、更全面地参与公司的目的和职能,以及作为更广泛、更广泛、更批判性地参与资本主义的一部分的社会义务和责任。鉴于公司作为国家在保障和提供广泛社会功能方面广泛撤退的剩余索求者的关键作用,公司治理是我们这个时代公共和私人权力转变的生动镜子,其跨国性质必须应对21世纪在全球加剧、相互交织的市场竞争经济中展开的挑战。采购流和分布模式在全球范围内。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Transnational Corporate Governance: The State of the Art and Twenty-First Century Challenges
This chapter explores corporate governance as a subfield of corporate law, which was traditionally embedded in a country’s legal-economic culture and to a large degree reflective of historically grown structures of industrial development, corporate ownership and specific levels of market regulation. Mirroring the rise in importance of the idea of shareholder wealth maximization as a firm’s definitive performance measure, corporate governance rules have been aimed at meeting the ‘market expectations’ of investors who could inject as well as remove crucial financial assets into their countries’ corporate actors with the ease of a mouse click. In this context, corporate governance began to push against and, increasingly, grow beyond the confines of nationally specific cultures and historical experiences of corporate law, to become, instead, a hotly contested, transnational regulatory field of competing visions of firms’ institutional and normative infrastructure in search of creating the most advantageous conditions to attract capital in volatile markets. This shift occurred at the same time that regulatory transformations in Western post-industrial societies since the early 1980s had begun to significantly shift public service provision and state-organized frameworks for old age security guarantees, access to health services or education to the sphere of the market. Today’s corporate governance laboratory is a transnational force field, fought over by a host of different state and non-state actors, including national governments as well as international organizations such as the United Nations or the OECD, but also by private actors such as institutional investors, ranging from banks to hedge funds as well as semi-public expert committees, think tanks and consultancies. Meanwhile, following, on the one hand, the two financial land-mark crises in 2001 and 2008/09 and, on the other, the simultaneously growing pressure on corporations from human rights, gender equality and environmental groups, the corporate governance debate again appears to be shifting. This time, the diversity of issues discussed under the corporate governance rubric points towards a wider and more comprehensive engagement with the firm’s purpose and functions, but also with its societal obligations and responsibilities as part of a wider, more broad-based, critical engagement with capitalism. Given the crucial role of firms as the residual claimants of a wide-ranging retreat of the state from its role in guaranteeing and providing a wide range of social functions, corporate governance is a telling mirror for the transformation of public and private power in our age and its transnational nature has to address the twenty-first century challenges unfolding in a globally intensifying, competitive economy of intertwined markets, sourcing streams and distribution patterns on a planetary scale.
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