Corporate Governance and Employees in Germany: Changing Linkages, Complementarities, and Tensions
RIETI Discussion Paper No. 04-E-008
60 Pages Posted: 1 Jul 2004
Date Written: January 2004
Abstract
This article examines institutional linkages between corporate governance and labour management in Germany. German corporate governance was characterised by the importance of banks, ownership concentration, long-term investment, and stable corporate networks. This system displayed important complementarities with stable long-term employment, investment in worker training, flexible quality production, low variability and dispersion in pay, and cooperative industrial relations during the post-war period. Since the mid-1990s, corporate governance has changed dramatically - a decline in the role of banks, the unwinding of corporate networks, the rise of foreign and institutional investors, en emerging market for corporate control, and changing careers and compensation of top managers. The paper investigates the resulting introduction of shareholder-value management practices and their impact on employees in large German companies. The findings show that these changes are related to the shrinking of stable core employment and the growth of variable pay. However, such tensions with shareholder value management have not undermined employee codetermination and collective bargaining institutions. Both play an important mediating role between capital market pressures and employment outcomes. The implications for the German "model" of corporate governance are discussed.
Keywords: Corporate Governance, Industrial Relations, Varieties of Capitalism, Production Regimes
JEL Classification: D21, G34, J24, J50, K22, L21, L22, L23, M14
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Towards a More Dynamic Theory of Capitalist Variety
By Richard Deeg and Gregory Jackson
-
Negotiated Shareholder Value: The German Version of an Anglo-American Practice
-
German Codetermination and German Securities Markets
By Mark J. Roe
-
An Emerging Market for Corporate Control? The Mannesmann Takeover and German Corporate Governance
By Gregory Jackson and Martin Höpner
-
Choice as Regulatory Reform: The Case of Japanese Corporate Governance
-
Contested Boundaries: Ambiguity and Creativity in the Evolution of German Codetermination