1 / 111

COMPARATIVE COMPANY LAW AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

COMPARATIVE COMPANY LAW AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE. Lectures on Company Law Prof. Jukka Mähönen October 2012. Lectures on company law. Jukka Mähönen: Comparative Company Law and Corporate Governance Wed 10.10.2012 16–20 P722 Thu  11.10.2012 16–19 P673 Fri    12.10.2012 16–19 P673

ranae
Télécharger la présentation

COMPARATIVE COMPANY LAW AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

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. COMPARATIVE COMPANY LAW AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE Lectures on Company Law Prof. Jukka Mähönen October 2012

  2. Lectures on company law • Jukka Mähönen: Comparative Company Law and Corporate Governance • Wed 10.10.2012 16–20 P722 • Thu  11.10.2012 16–19 P673 • Fri    12.10.2012 16–19 P673 • Seppo Villa: Corporate Finance • Tue  16.10.2012 10–13 P674 • Wed 17.10.2012 10–13 P722 • Thu  18.10.2012 10–14 (12.15 – 14:00 exam) AUD XII (Main building) • Re-exam day: public exam day 20.11.2012 Place: PI Time: 09:00

  3. Comparative company law and corporate governance • Aims • Theoretical basis of modern company law and corporate governance: contract and agency theory, governance models • History of company law and corporate governance and company law families • General structure of EU company law

  4. Comparative company law and corporate governance • Main features of corporate form (legal personality, limited liability, residual rights, separation of control and ownership, free transfer of shares) • Literature • Reinier Kraakman et al.: The anatomy of corporate law : a comparative and functional approach, 2nd ed., Oxford University Press: New York 2009

  5. Corporate Finance • Aims • The structure of corporate finance • The distinction between equity and loans • Mezzanine finance: subordinated loans, preferred shares • The annual accounts

  6. Corporate finance • The doctrine of capital maintenance • Distribution of funds • Creditor protection: solvency and balance sheet tests • Literature • Kraakman et al (2009) • Seppo Villa: Creditor Protection and the Application of the Solvency and Balance Sheet Tests under the Company Laws of Finland and New Zealand

  7. Theoretical basis • Mainstream corporate law paradigm • Kraakman et al. (2009) • End of history of corporate law • Henry Hansmann & Reinier Kraakman: The end of history for corporate law. Georgetown Law Journal, 439–468 (2001)

  8. Theoretical basis • Critique against mainstream paradigm • Adolf Berle & Gardiner Means: The Modern Corporation and Private Property (1932) • Luh Luh Lan & Loizos Heracleous: Rethinking agency theory: The view from law. Academy of Management Review, 294–314 (2010)

  9. Mainstream paradigm • Emphasis on contracting and self-regulation • Basis on microeconomics: theory of the firm • Nexus of contracts theory • Principal agent theory • Shareholder primacy

  10. Critique • Managerialism • Expert management the corporate strategic centre in a bureaucratic hierarchy • Stakeholder primacy • Duty of managers and directors to take into consideration the interests of non-shareholder constituencies having stakes in the company as important as those of shareholders • Director primacy • The board of directors a central, independent decision-maker mediating competing stakeholder interests and allocating the firm surplus among them

  11. Important to remember • Long history of corporate law • Roman law: familia, peculium, societas, societas publicanorum • Medieval law: societas, compagnia, commenda, guilds • Early modern time: great companies • Dutch East Indian Company (VOC) • English East Indian Company (EIC) • Modern regulation • ca 1850-

  12. Historical theories on company law • Fiction theory • Organic theory • Aggregate theory

  13. Fiction theory • Company a state-created legal fiction only, without substantial reality or own free will • Public good • Basis: state concession • German variant: Friedrich von Savigny, Karl Puchta • U.S. variant: Darthmouth College v. Woodward (1819); David Millon: Frontiers of legal thought I: Theories of the corporation. Duke Law Journal, 201–262 (1990) • Influence: Stakeholder primacy

  14. Organic theory • Company a real entity having a separate existence from its shareholders • Company a naturally occurring being • German variant: Georg Beseler, Otto von Gierke • U.S. variant: Ernst Freund: The legal nature of corporations (1897) • Influence • Managerialism: Berle & Means (1932)

  15. Aggregate theory • Company formed by voluntary private contracting • Basis: contract theory • German variant: Rudolf von Ihering (interest theory) • U.S. variant: Victor Morawetz: Private corporations (1886), Charles Beach: The Law of Private Corporations (1891)

  16. Aggregatetheory • Influence • Shareholder primacy: Michael J. Jensen & William H. Meckling: Theory of the Firm: Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs and Ownership Structure. Journal of Financial Economics, 305–360 (1976); Hansmann & Kraakman (2001) • Director primacy: Margaret Blair & Lynn Stout: A team production theory of corporate law. Virginia Law Review, 247–328 (1999)

  17. Company law regulation • contract law • corporate agreement, by-laws, articles of association etc. • specific company legislation • legal personality • limitations of stakeholder responsibilities • joint and self-regulation • corporate governance codes • public supervision • general: eg Companies House, Finnish Board of Patents and Registration • securities markets: eg. SEC, FSA

  18. Comparative approach • Three legal families • Anglo-American • Continental European (French-Germanic) • Scandinavian • Harmonization of EU company law

  19. Comparative approach • Different views on the scope of company law • Relation to other branches of law • contract law • securities law • labour law • environmental law • tax law • administrative law • basic and human rights • four freedoms in the EC Treaty • Different kinds of corporate forms

  20. Comparative approach • Typical corporate forms • partnerships • limited partnerships • company limited by shares • private (ltd, GmbH, SARL, SAS, ApS) • public (plc, AG, SA, AS) • cooperatives • non-profit organizations • civil law “foundations” • cf. trust and its European counterparts • charitable companies • “associations”

  21. European harmonization • Changes in British company law • Convergence to Continental company law • ”Americanization” of EU company law during the last decade

  22. French-German system • Civil law • Emphasis on the legislator and jurisprudence • Inefficient role of courts as rule makers • Debt finance • Emphasis on creditor protection • Weak shareholder rights against directors •  Strong dividend rights (substitution hypothesis: weak shareholder protection is compensated by dividends)

  23. French-German system • Example: German Aktiengesellschaft (AG) • Two-tier system • Vorstand (”board”) • Aufsichtsrat (”supervisory board”) • Strong creditor protection • Hausbank system • Growing importance of securities markets • Kodex

  24. Scandinavian system • French-German basis • Legal realism • Courts as law-makers • Stronger role of equity financing than in French-German system but weaker than in Anglo-American world • Modern legislation • Norway 1997 • Sweden 2005 • Finland 2006 • Denmark 2009

  25. Scandinavian system • Points to be remember • Multiple voting rights • Cf. Germany • Equal treatment of shareholders • Cf. Anglo-American law

  26. Anglo-American system • Statutory law like in Continental and Scandinavian countries • Common law: courts as law-makers • Codification of case law in statutory law • Equity financing • Strong role for securities markets • Strong investor protection • Strong shareholder rights against directors

  27. Anglo-American system • UK: 2006 Companies Act • SME approach • Enlightened value maximization • US • State legislation • Fiduciary duties and business judgment rule • Corporate law competition: Delaware

  28. ”Americanization” of European law • Recent trends in EU company law • National law: the new 2006 Finnish Companies Act • ”Revlon duties”: directors’ duties in takeovers • Business judgment rule in duty of care

  29. EU company law • 4 Regulations • European Economic Interest Groupings (EEIG, 1985) • European Companies (SE, 2001) • IAS/IFRS Standards (IAS Regulation, 2002) • European Cooperative Societies (SCE 2003)

  30. EU company law • 13 Directives • “Old” directives • Disclosure (1st Dir., 1968) • Capital (2nd Dir., 1977) • Merger (3rd Dir., 1977) • Annual Accounts (4th Dir., 1978) • Division (6th Dir., 1982) • Consolidated Accounts (7th Dir., 1983) • Auditors (8th Dir., 1984) • Branches (11th Dir., 1989) • Single-Member Companies (12th. Dir., 1989)

  31. EU company law • “New” directives  US impact • Takeovers (13th Dir., 2003) • Transparency (2004) • Cross-border mergers (10th Dir. 2005) • Auditing (new 8th Dir, 2007) • Shareholders’ rights (2007)

  32. European corporate forms • European economic interest grouping (EEIG) • primarily a cross-border • partnership or ‘joint venture’ • depending on the applicable law – eg. Finnish law: rules of a partnership • European public company (SE) • cross-border public company limited by shares • Finnish law: rules of a plc • European cooperative society (SCE) • cross-border cooperative society • Eg Finnish law: rules of a cooperative society • European private company (SPE)

  33. General features of limited liability law • a limited liability company a very young phenomenon • classical company laws 1855-1900 • Britain 1855 • France 1867 • Germany 1871-91 • Sweden and Finland 1895 • U.S. States (New York, New Jersey, Delaware) end of the 19th Century • a recognizable company form in all industrialized countries by 1900

  34. Main features • full legal personality • limited liability • recidual rights • separation of control and ownership • free transfer of shares

  35. Legal personality • Enables • separation of corporate assets and corporate creditors from shareholders’ assets and liabilities (asset partitioning) • Protection of corporate assets from shareholders’ creditors (entity shielding) • See Henry Hansmann & Reinier Kraakman & Richard Squire: Law and the Rise of the Firm, Harvard Law Review), 1333-1403 (2006)

  36. Legal personality • Three elements • Protection of creditors from shareholders • Protection of company from shareholders’ creditors • Protection of corporate creditors from shareholders’ creditors • Weak forms • Partnership • Strong forms • Limited liability company

  37. Legal personality • State intervention necessary to achieve protection of corporate assets from shareholders’ creditors • Transaction costs! • Negotiations between every shareholders and every creditor • Moral hazard! • Free transfer of shares • Asymmetric information

  38. Pros • Reduction of potential creditor information costs • reduction of creditor monitoring costs • reduction of management agency costs • reduction of administrative costs of bankruptcy • Reduction of amount of inefficient bankruptcies • Protection of going concern value

  39. Pros • Enables capital accumulation and investment diversification • Increases transfer of shares • Cf partnership • Shareholder’s creditor • Right to corporate assets • Right to share

  40. Cons • Debtor opportunism and moral hazard • Risk premium • Shareholders’ creditors! • Enforcement costs • A sophisticated bankruptcy system • Weak legal personality

  41. Cons • Illiquid investments • Dispersed ownership • Free transfer of shares! • Exploitation by controlling persons • Opportunistic behaviour of controlling shareholders and directors • Problem of private benefits

  42. Private benefits • Pecuniary private benefits v non-pecuniary private benefits • See Ronald J. Gilson: Controlling Shareholders and Corporate Governance: Complicating the Comparative Taxonomy, Harvard Law Review, 1641-1679 (2006) • Pecuniary benefits: ”stealing” (eg tunnelling) • Non-pecuniary benefits: do not reduce corporate value • Political influence • Societal status

  43. Legal tools • Fiduciary duties: directors and controlling shareholders • Equal treatment • Derivative suits • Market for corporate control

  44. Limited liability • Owner shielding • Shareholders protected from corporate creditors • Not very important • Cf. partnership • Not necessary for free transfer of shares • Directors’ competence: agency

  45. Limited liability • Not problematic for creditors • Contractual protection – eg control covenants • Risk premium • Weak creditors and non-contractual creditors • Free-riding

  46. Other • Recídual rights • Against opportunistic partial liquidation before total liquidation • Separation ownership and control • Agency problem • Free transfer of shares • Legal personality

  47. Main features – exceptions • recidual rights belong to the shareholders v. charitable companies • full legal personality v lifting the corporate veil • moral hazard • free transfer – exceptions for private companies

  48. Main features – exceptions • Separation of control and ownership: lots of variations • shareholders meeting v board of directors • board of directors v general manager • board of directors v supervisory board • one tier – two tier – one and a half tier – two and a half tier systems

  49. Historical developments • Four basic models • manager-oriented • labour-oriented • state-oriented • shareholder-oriented

  50. Manager-oriented model • United States ca 1930-1970 • power vested with independent professional management • best possibilities to govern the company for the benefit of the society • cf. corporate social responsibility • if no control – danger of opportunistic behavior • principal agency problem

More Related