Contingent Capital: Short-term Investors and the Evolution of Corporate Governance in France and Germany
Michel Goyer
Abstract
Corporate governance has become a major topic of interest for academics and policymakers in recent years. The advent of major financial scandals in the early 2000s (Enron, WorldCom, Ahold, Parmalat) has been followed by important financial market turmoil by the end of the decade. A common theme associated with these developments is the increased power of finance – especially shareholder value-oriented institutional investors — across advanced capitalist economies. Will the pressures of financial market globalization force companies to converge on a shareholder-based model of corporate governan ... More
Corporate governance has become a major topic of interest for academics and policymakers in recent years. The advent of major financial scandals in the early 2000s (Enron, WorldCom, Ahold, Parmalat) has been followed by important financial market turmoil by the end of the decade. A common theme associated with these developments is the increased power of finance – especially shareholder value-oriented institutional investors — across advanced capitalist economies. Will the pressures of financial market globalization force companies to converge on a shareholder-based model of corporate governance? This book which highlights the importance of the institutional context in which companies are embedded, focuses on the divergence in the allocation of capital by shareholder value-oriented institutional investors in Europe's two largest nonliberal market economies: France and Germany. The major difference between these two
economies is that France has proven to be twice as attractive to short-term, impatient shareholders with short-term horizon as compared to Germany — a disparity that disappears for investors with a longer term horizon. These empirical findings highlight the importance of providing a sophisticated differentiation between different categories of institutional investors in order to assess the impact associated with the greater prominence of finance. Goyer points to the importance of firm-level institutional arrangements in the process by which companies coordinate their activities as the key variable for understanding the investment allocation of impatient investors. The implication is that the governing of corporations is not about whether or not strategies of shareholder value are being adopted — but rather what types of strategies of shareholder value are being pursued.
Keywords:
comparative corporate governance,
complex causation,
France,
Germany,
institutional theory,
law and economics,
varieties of capitalism
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2011 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199578085 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2012 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199578085.001.0001 |