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Shareholder Primacy and the Distribution of Wealth


Paddy Ireland


University of Kent, Canterbury - Kent Law School


Modern Law Review, Vol. 68, No. 1, pp. 49-81, January 2005

Abstract:     
In recent years a growing consensus has emerged in favour of the shareholder-oriented model of the corporation. Increasingly, this model is justified not on the basis of shareholder ownership rights but on efficiency grounds: whoever the immediate and direct beneficiaries of shareholder-orientation, it is argued, it ultimately indirectly benefits everyone by ensuring the maximization of aggregate social wealth. The prevalence of this view has caused the distributional dimensions of corporate governance to be neglected. This paper examines the distribution of share ownership and financial wealth in the US and the UK. Although share ownership has become more widely spread, it argues, it remains very heavily concentrated with the result that shareholder primacy is in reality the primacy of a small privileged elite. After an exploration of the contradictions of working class shareholding and the impact of greater shareholder-orientation on the distribution of wealth, the paper concludes by re-evaluating Hansmann and Kraakman's 'end of corporate history' thesis, arguing that recent developments represent a triumph not for efficiency but for the growing power of the shareholder class.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 33

Accepted Paper Series


Date posted: December 31, 2004  

Suggested Citation

Ireland, Paddy W., Shareholder Primacy and the Distribution of Wealth. Modern Law Review, Vol. 68, No. 1, pp. 49-81, January 2005. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=640097

Contact Information

Paddy W. Ireland (Contact Author)
University of Kent, Canterbury - Kent Law School ( email )
Canterbury, Kent CT2 7NS
United Kingdom
01227 823344 (Phone)
01227 827831 (Fax)
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


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