Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2009
We would like to thank Alan Auerbach, Steve Bank, Steve Bond, Bill Gale, Bill Gentry, Jim Hines, Emmanuel Saez, Richard Sansing, Gautam Tripathi, an anonymous referee, our discussants (Jeff Brown and Jeff Strnad) and participants at the Office of Tax Policy Research/Burch Center conference on “Taxing Corporate Income in the 21st Century” for valuable comments and suggestions on an earlier draft of this chapter. Mihir Desai acknowledges the financial support of the Division of Research of Harvard Business School.
Introduction
The extent to which corporate ownership is widely dispersed is an important dimension of an economy's corporate governance environment. The mechanisms by which diffuse owners police managers and the reasons why much of the world does not feature diffuse corporate ownership are major themes in the corporate governance literature. The comparative strand of this literature emphasizes legal origins as a critical determinant of the investor rights that facilitate ownership diffusion (e.g., La Porta et al., 1998). Subsequent efforts to trace the time-series patterns of governance and ownership concentration (e.g., Franks, Mayer, and Rossi, 2003; Rajan and Zingales, 2003) have questioned the singular role of legal investor protections, given the diffusion of ownership in the absence of legal protections at various times in the 20th century. The dispersion of corporate ownership across households is also closely related to questions surrounding stock market participation that have attracted considerable interest in the recent literature (e.g., Griffin, Nardari, and Stulz, 2004; Vissing-Jorgensen, 2002).
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