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Subject: Law  Book Title: Corporate Ownership and Control
Corporate Ownership and Control
British Business Transformed
Cheffins, Brian R., S.J. Berwin Professor of Corporate Law, University of Cambridge
Print publication date: 2008
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2009
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-923697-8
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199236978.001.0001


 
Abstract: The typical British publicly traded company has widely dispersed share ownership and is run by professionally trained managers who collectively own an insufficiently large percentage of shares to dictate the outcome when shareholders vote. This separation of ownership and control has not only dictated the tenor of corporate governance debate in Britain but serves to distinguish the UK from most other countries. Existing theories fail to account adequately for arrangements in the UK. Corporate Ownership and Control accordingly seeks to explain why ownership became divorced from control in major British companies. The book is organized by reference to the ‘sell side’, which encompasses the factors that might prompt those owning large blocks of shares to exit or accept dilution of their stake and the ‘buy side’, which involves factors that motivate investors to buy equities and deter the new shareholders from themselves exercising control. The book's approach is strongly historical in orientation, as it examines how matters evolved from the 17th century through to today. While a modern-style divorce of ownership and control can be traced back at least as far as mid-19th century railways, the ‘outsider/arm's-length’ system of ownership and control that currently characterizes British corporate governance did not crystallize until the second half of the 20th century. The book brings the story right up to date by showing current arrangements are likely to be durable. The insights the book offers correspondingly should remain salient for some time to come.

Keywords: separation of ownership and control, corporate governance, business history, agency costs, private benefits of control, company law, stock exchange regulation, dividends, mergers, investor sentiment
Table of Contents
Preface
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ONE. Setting the Scene
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TWO. The Determinants of Ownership and Control: Current Theories
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THREE. The ‘Sell Side’
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FOUR. The ‘Buy Side’
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FIVE. Up to 1880
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SIX. 1880–1914
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SEVEN. The Separation of Ownership and Control by 1914
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EIGHT. 1914–1939
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NINE. 1940–1990: The Sell Side
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TEN. 1940–1990: The Buy Side
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ELEVEN. Epilogue: Challenges to the UK System of Ownership and Control
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Index
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doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199236978.001.0001
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