An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
Pages
▼
Pages
▼
Monday, October 21, 2013
Yves Smith — Why the “Maximizing Shareholder Value” Theory of Corporate Governance is Bogus
Yves debunks the myth of the obligation of corporate management to maximize shareholder value. Legally, "equity is residual" and sits at the bottom of the scale of corporate obligation.
This myth lies at foundation of short-term managerialism aka managing to the quarterly report that is distorting incentives. As Yves points out, it was dreamed up by an economist with no legal expertise and no deep expertise in management science other than theoretical.
It doesn't hold water legally, and management gurus like Peter F. Drucker have denounced it as short sighted, designed to enrich corporate top management based on performance bonuses, equity compensation, and equity prices at the expense of developing long-term strategy.
Naked Capitalism
Why the “Maximizing Shareholder Value” Theory of Corporate Governance is Bogus
Yves Smith
Maximizing shareholder value is bogus because corporations, like the other so-called creditworthy, are allowed to steal the public's purchasing power and thus should work for the public good, not private profit.
ReplyDeleteBut remove government backing for the banks and things change. Then working to maximize shareholder value would be legitimate since the corporations would have to "share" much more wealth and power since they could no longer steal them via loans from a counterfeiting cartel.
Money creation MUST be ethical, don't you know?