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New Thinking on ‘Shareholder Primacy’Lynn A. StoutCornell Law School - Jack G. Clarke Business Law Institute February 18, 2011 UCLA School of Law, Law-Econ Research Paper No. 11-04 Abstract: By the beginning of the twenty-first century, many observers had come to believe that U.S. corporate law should, and does, embrace a “shareholder primacy” rule that requires corporate directors to maximize shareholder wealth. This Essay argues that such a view is mistaken. As a positive matter, U.S. corporate law and practice does not require directors to maximize shareholder wealth but instead grants them a wide range of discretion, constrained only at the margin by market forces, to sacrifice shareholder wealth in order to benefit other constituencies. Although recent “reforms” designed to promote greater shareholder power have begun to limit this discretion, U.S. corporate governance remains director-centric. As a normative matter, several lines of theory have emerged in modern corporate scholarship that independently suggest why director governance of public firms is desirable from shareholders’ own perspective. The Essay reviews five of these lines of theory and explores why each gives us reason to believe that shareholder primacy rules in public companies in fact disadvantage shareholders. It concludes that shareholder primacy thinking in its conventional form is on the brink of intellectual collapse, and will be replaced by more sophisticated and nuanced theories of corporate structure and purpose.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 28 Keywords: corporate governance, shareholder primacy, social responsibility, corporate structure Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: February 21, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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