陷于上下之间:网络效应下各州对公司章程的竞争

Brett H. Mcdonnell
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引用次数: 5

摘要

几十年来,美国法律学者一直在争论允许公司选择在哪个州注册,而不管他们在哪里开展业务的影响。直到最近,争论几乎完全集中在选择公司所在地的管理者是否有动机选择一个法律对管理者有利而对股东不利的州(“竞相向底”理论),或者他们是否有动机选择法律对股东有利的州(“竞相向顶”理论)。最近,一些学者质疑,从企业决策者的角度来看,无论这些决策者的动机是什么,州宪章竞争过程是否一定会导致最优选择。各种网络效应的存在可能会导致公司在一个已经在特许经营竞赛中处于领先地位的州注册,即使其他一些州可能提供更好的实体法。例如,公司可能更倾向于选择一个拥有完善的、因而更可预测的公司法体系的州,或者他们可能更倾向于在经验丰富、熟悉公司法事务的法官面前出庭。这些影响可能会导致整个系统陷入次优法则的支配。本文假设在公司章程竞争中存在显著的网络效应。然后,它询问允许州之间的竞争是否是一个有吸引力的选择,以及多大程度的竞争是最好的。即使网络效应造成了陷入次优主导状态的可能性,允许竞争也可能提高形成良好公司法律体系的几率。本文提出了一个非常简单的特许经营竞争模型,作为开始思考相关问题的一种方式。在这种模式下,一些竞争往往比完全没有竞争产生更好的结果。然而,更多的竞争并不一定比更少的竞争好,大量的竞争可能和没有竞争一样糟糕。本文考虑了这一领域的许多尚未解决的问题。最后,它提出了一个问题,即在理论和经验证据没有明确答案的情况下,如何提出经验建议。它表明,目前的结构不太可能发生变化,而且批评者还没有提出有说服力的理由来支持这种变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Getting Stuck Between Bottom and Top: State Competition for Corporate Charters in the Presence of Network Effects
For decades, American legal scholars have debated over the implications of allowing corporations to choose in which state they will incorporate, irrespective of where they do business. Until recently the debate has centered almost exclusively on whether the managers who choose where to incorporate have incentive to choose a state whose laws favor managers to the disadvantage of shareholders (the "race to the bottom" thesis) or whether their incentives are to choose states whose laws treat shareholders properly (the "race to the top" thesis). Recently, some scholars have questioned whether the state charter competition process will necessarily lead to an optimal choice from the point of view of corporate decisionmakers, whatever the incentives of those decisionmakers might be. The presence of a variety of network effects may cause corporations to incorporate in a state which already has taken the lead in the charter race, even if some other states might offer better substantive law. For instance, corporations may prefer a state which has a well-developed, and hence more predictable, body of corporate law, or they may prefer to appear before judges who from much experience are familiar with corporate law matters. These effects may cause the whole system to get stuck with sub-optimal laws dominating. This paper takes the presence of significant network effects in corporate charter competition as a given. It then asks whether allowing competition between states is an attractive option, and how much competition is best. Even if network effects create the possibility of getting stuck with a sub-optimal dominant state, allowing competition may improve the odds of reaching a good corporate legal system. The paper presents a very simple model of charter competition as a way to start thinking about the issues involved. Within that model, some competition tends to lead to better results than no competition at all. However, more competition is not necessarily better than less, and a very large amount of competition may be as bad as no competition at all. The paper considers many questions that remain quite open in this area. It concludes by posing the question of how to make empirical recommendations where theory and empirical evidence suggest no clear answers. It suggests that little change from the present structure is likely, and that critics have yet to make a persuasive case for such change.
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