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The Evolution of Shareholder and Creditor Protection in Australia: An International ComparisonHelen L. AndersonMelbourne Law School Michelle Anne WelshMonash University - Faculty of Business and Economics Ian RamsayUniversity of Melbourne - Melbourne Law School Peter G. GahanUniversity of Melbourne - Department of Management and Marketing March 10, 2011 International and Comparative Law Quarterly, Vol. 61, No. 1, pp.171-207, 2012 U of Melbourne Legal Studies Research Paper No. 539 Monash U. Department of Business Law & Taxation Research Paper No. 1782412 Abstract: This study is part of a larger international investigation of the effects of a country's legal origins on the style of business regulation. We employ an innovative 'leximetric' methodology to numerically code the protective strength of Australian corporate law for both shareholder and creditor protection for the period 1970 to 2010. This leximetric methodology has been used in a prominent international debate concerning the development of legal rules and the effects of different styles of regulation on a range of economic outcomes - the legal origins debate. Drawing on similar data compiled by Armour, Deakin, Lele and Siems in five other countries (France, Germany, India, the UK and the US), we compare changes in the level of protection afforded to Australian shareholders and creditors with developments in other countries. Our analysis finds that in Australia there was a sustained upward trend in shareholder protection, but not in the case of creditor protection. Compared to the five other countries, the level of protection afforded to shareholders under Australian law was relatively high and this was also the case for the level of protection afforded to creditors.We also examine the extent of convergence and divergence in shareholder and creditor protection among the countries in the study. We find persistent divergence in shareholder protection, with the extent of divergence in 2005 similar to that in 1970. For creditor protection, we find increasing divergence among the countries over the period of study. Our findings are not supportive of legal origins theory.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 37 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: March 10, 2011 ; Last revised: October 17, 2012Suggested CitationContact Information
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