所有权与公司控制权分离的政治前提

M. Roe
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引用次数: 270

摘要

大型上市公司在美国的商业中占据主导地位,尽管它存在严重的缺陷,即股东和经理之间经常存在脆弱的关系。管理者的议程可能与股东的有所不同;将管理者与股东紧密联系在一起一直是美国公司治理的核心。但在其他经济发达国家,所有权不是分散的,而是集中的。这在很大程度上是集中的,因为在普通的政治环境中,比如在欧洲大陆的社会民主国家,将上市公司的管理者与股东联系在一起的微妙线索很容易断裂。社会民主主义迫使管理者稳定就业,迫使他们放弃哪怕是一些与企业一起实现利润最大化的风险,并迫使他们在市场不再与企业的生产能力相一致时耗尽现有资本,而不是缩小规模。由于上市公司的管理者必须拥有自由裁量权,他们如何使用这种自由裁量权对股东来说至关重要,而社会民主主义对管理者的压力促使他们偏离股东的偏好,以实现利润最大化。此外,在美国,激励薪酬、透明会计、敌意收购和强有力的股东财富最大化规范等使经理人与分散股东保持一致的手段,在大陆社会民主国家更难实施。因此,在其他条件相同的情况下,社会民主国家的上市公司将有更高的管理代理成本,而大规模持股将继续作为股东控制这些成本的下一个最佳方式。事实上,当我们把世界上最富有的国家按左右连续线排列,然后把它们按近乎分散的所有权连续线排列时,两者之间的相关性很强。诚然,对社会总福利的影响是模糊的;社会民主国家可能会提高社会总福利,但即便如此,它们的公共企业数量也要少于社会反应较差的国家。因此,我们不仅揭示了欧洲所有权集中的政治解释,而且还揭示了美国上市公司崛起的关键政治先决条件,即缺乏强大的社会民主以及随之而来的对美国商业公司施加的政治压力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Political Preconditions to Separating Ownership from Corporate Control
The large public firm dominates business in the United States despite its critical infirmities, namely the frequently fragile relations between stockholders and managers. Managers' agendas can differ from shareholders'; tying managers tightly to shareholders has been central to American corporate governance. But in other economically-advanced nations ownership is not diffuse but concentrated. It is concentrated in no small measure because the delicate threads that tie managers to shareholders in the public firm fray easily in common political environments, such as those in the continental European social democracies. Social democracies press managers to stabilize employment, press them to forego even some profit-maximizing risks with the firm, and press them to use up capital in place rather than to down-size when markets no longer are aligned with firm's production capabilities. Since managers must have discretion in the public firm, how they use that discretion is crucial to stockholders, and social democratic pressures on managers induce them to stray from their shareholders' preference to maximize profits. Moreover, the means that align managers with diffuse stockholders in the United States--incentive compensation, transparent accounting, hostile takeovers, and strong shareholder-wealth maximization norms--are harder to implement in continental social democracies. Hence, public firms in social democracies will, all else equal, have higher managerial agency costs, and large-block shareholding will persist as shareholders' next best remaining way to control those costs. Indeed, when we line up the world's richest nations on a left-right continuum and then line them up on a close to diffuse ownership continuum, the two correlate powerfully. True, the effects on total social welfare are ambiguous; social democracies may enhance total social welfare, but if they do, they do so with fewer public firms than less socially-responsive nations. We thus uncover not only a political explanation for ownership concentration in Europe, but also a crucial political prerequisite to the rise of the public firm in the United States, namely the absence of a strong social democracy and the concomitant political pressures it would have put on the American business firm.
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