Posted on January 13, 2011, 10:57 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Climate Change,
Company Law,
Corporate Governance,
Economic Theory,
Free Market Capitalism,
Green Business,
Management Practice,
Political Decision,
Shareholder Value,
Uncategorized.
Neo-classical microeconomic theory, especially in its more recent fundamentalist manifestations, has done immense damage to the real economy while nurturing the parasitic financial sector, as recounted from time to time elsewhere on this site.
Various alternative approaches have identified and addressed problems created by that theory. Welfare economics, the economics of social balance, and what [...]
Posted on December 5, 2010, 9:54 pm, by Gordon Pearson, under
Company Law,
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Free Market Capitalism,
Political Decision,
Shareholder Value,
Stakeholder theory,
free trade ideology.
The takeover of British confectioner Cadbury, with its long and honourable history in British industry, from its Quaker origins to its death throes earlier this year, has been featured as the main topic of two posts on this site, and mentioned in passing on five others. It is a compulsive story which celebrates the satisfaction [...]
Posted on November 6, 2010, 11:01 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Company Law,
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Financial Sector,
Free Market Capitalism,
Shareholder Value,
Stakeholder theory.
The idea that companies, if not all economic activity, exists to maximise the wealth of shareholders or owners, dominates the world of corporate governance and much else. Bankers and traders believe it. Industrial managers have been led to accept it. Universities and business schools preach it. It is part of the free market ideology, often [...]
Posted on June 29, 2010, 2:12 pm, by Gordon Pearson, under
Agency theory,
Company Law,
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic Theory,
Free Market Capitalism,
Management Theory,
Shareholder Value,
Uncategorized.
‘The Rise and Fall of Management’ highlights some issues as of particular importance to the current situation. For instance, the universal adoption of agency theory. Agency is a legal relationship where the agent acts on behalf of the principal who is bound by the agent’s actions, and the agent is bound to act, in his [...]
A key tenet of the free market philosophy, elegantly expressed by Milton Friedman, was that businesses should focus exclusively on maximising shareholder value and not allow other considerations, apart from compliance with the law, to intrude on their business activities. That’s what Friedman stood for. And that’s what governments over the past 30 years have [...]