1 / 11

Two Questions

Is the Responsibility of Business to Pursue Shareholder Value? By Oliver Hart and Luigi Zingales June, 2016 Preliminary. Two Questions

bobbyk
Télécharger la présentation

Two Questions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Is the Responsibility of Business to Pursue Shareholder Value?By Oliver Hart and Luigi ZingalesJune, 2016Preliminary

  2. Two Questions • Does the board of directors of a public company have a legal duty to maximize shareholder value? (We take shareholder value to mean the monetary return from holding shares.) • Should it maximize shareholder value?

  3. (1) is the subject of much current debate in the U.S. The situation seems quite confused (some say deliberately so). • Concerning (2). Milton Friedman famously argued that the answer is yes. • Most corporate finance and law scholars seem to agree, at least if value max is interpreted as long-run value max.

  4. (There are exceptions, e.g., if shareholders work in the company, consume the company’s product, or hold shares in competing or related companies.) • In this talk we want to develop by way of example the idea that, if shareholders have ethical concerns, the answer to (2) may be no. • Connection to CSR literature, especially Baron (2007).

  5. Example Company initially owned by founder F goes public at date 0dispersed ownership zero interest rate, risk neutrality At date 1 action or 1 chosen monetary profit and environmental damage . Damage experienced by outsiders Obviously is socially efficient

  6. Assume a large number of consumers in the economy, who are of two types, and Type consumers (fraction : Type consumers (fraction 1−𝜃): Here is consumer ’s monetary wealth Type 𝐴’s care only about money Type ’s put some weight on “social concerns” (the way this is captured is a short-hand; in the paper social concerns will enter utility only if a type B feels “responsible” for the action x)

  7. Analysis If will occur at date 1, company will sell for 100 at date 0 If 𝑥 = 1 will occur at date 1, company will sell for 200 at date 0 (even type B’s will pay 200 since the damage is independent of their ownership decision)

  8. What does founder F want? If F is a type A, he wants If F is a type B, he wants as long as , i.e.

  9. How can F’s choice be implemented? Here are some possibilities: Case 1: F is a type A. (i) Stipulate in corporate charter (ii) Specify a narrow notion of fiduciary duty, so that shareholders can sue if value max is not pursued (iii) Encourage takeovers (with freeze-outs) and/or intervention by active shareholders (free-rider problems work against shareholders with social concerns; can show that a prosocial bidder will not bid)

  10. Case 2: F is a type B. (i) Stipulate x in corporate charter (ii) Specify a broad notion of fiduciary duty (iii) Encourage binding resolutions by shareholders if most people share F’s tastes ( small) (iv) Discourage takeovers

  11. Conclusions • A blanket requirement that a board must pursue long-run value maximization seems unjustified • To put it another way, shareholder interests and value max may not be the same thing • But of course giving the board too much flexibility can be dangerous • So maybe encourage founder to include a mission statement in their charters: purse these goals to avoid shareholder lawsuits • Maybe encourage boards to consult shareholders more often on what they want: do so and you will avoid lawsuits • (Do we need benefit corporations? The dead hand problem…)

More Related