In this article I argue that crisis-driven corporate governance reform efforts in the United States and the United Kingdom that aim to empower shareholders are misguided, and offer an explanation of why policymakers in each country have reacted to the financial crisis as they have. I first discuss the risk incentives of shareholders and managers in financial firms, and examine how excessive leverage and risk-taking in pursuit of short-term returns for shareholders led to the crisis. I then describe the far greater power and centrality that U.K. shareholders have historically possessed relative to their U.S. counterparts, and explore historical and cultural factors explaining this distinction - notably that the more robust U.K. welfare state...
This paper aims to explore the corporate governance ofbanks in economic crisis and whether poor corp...
Manuscript Type Empirical Research Question/Issue We examine the effects of firm- and country-l...
AbstractThis Article discusses why a “corporate governance movement” that commenced in the United St...
In this article I argue that crisis-driven corporate governance reform efforts in the United States ...
American populism has had a major impact on the development of U.S. corporate governance throughou...
The Financial Crisis which began in 2007/2008 remains the most severe since the Great Depression of ...
This Article argues that the U.K. regulatory response to the financial crisis, in the form of “stewa...
The financial crisis of the late 2000s resulted in enormous costs to the economies of many countries...
The American economy has lurched from crisis to crisis for over a decade, enduring long stretches of...
The global financial crisis of 2008 has stimulated the debate on corporate governance and shareholde...
The prolonged systemic crisis in international financial markets commencing in 2007 was also a crisi...
This article questions the efficiency of the shareholder primacy model of corporate governance in li...
Recent financial events indicate it may be time to pose a new challenge to the assumed efficiencies ...
(Excerpt) This Article explores these questions and more with respect to the current role the govern...
Much contemporary analysis has concluded that the recent financial crisis and bank failures were, in...
This paper aims to explore the corporate governance ofbanks in economic crisis and whether poor corp...
Manuscript Type Empirical Research Question/Issue We examine the effects of firm- and country-l...
AbstractThis Article discusses why a “corporate governance movement” that commenced in the United St...
In this article I argue that crisis-driven corporate governance reform efforts in the United States ...
American populism has had a major impact on the development of U.S. corporate governance throughou...
The Financial Crisis which began in 2007/2008 remains the most severe since the Great Depression of ...
This Article argues that the U.K. regulatory response to the financial crisis, in the form of “stewa...
The financial crisis of the late 2000s resulted in enormous costs to the economies of many countries...
The American economy has lurched from crisis to crisis for over a decade, enduring long stretches of...
The global financial crisis of 2008 has stimulated the debate on corporate governance and shareholde...
The prolonged systemic crisis in international financial markets commencing in 2007 was also a crisi...
This article questions the efficiency of the shareholder primacy model of corporate governance in li...
Recent financial events indicate it may be time to pose a new challenge to the assumed efficiencies ...
(Excerpt) This Article explores these questions and more with respect to the current role the govern...
Much contemporary analysis has concluded that the recent financial crisis and bank failures were, in...
This paper aims to explore the corporate governance ofbanks in economic crisis and whether poor corp...
Manuscript Type Empirical Research Question/Issue We examine the effects of firm- and country-l...
AbstractThis Article discusses why a “corporate governance movement” that commenced in the United St...