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Corporate Governance Reform, Regulatory Politics, and the Foundations of Finance Capitalism in the United States and Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

Abstract

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Since 1990, both the U.S. and Germany have substantially reformed their corporate governance regimes as part of an emerging paradigm of international finance capitalism increasingly dependent on securities markets and private shareholding. Corporate governance reform and the emergence of finance capitalism, however, present a double paradox. First, the development of financial markets and the increasing importance of market relations, often linked to the diminution of state power, have been accompanied by a substantial and ongoing expansion of law and regulatory capacity into the private sphere to boost shareholder protections. Second, center-left parties in both countries took advantage of economic crises to press for pro-shareholder reforms against center-right opposition allied with managerial elites. This article explains these developments by analyzing reform processes in United States and Germany over the past decade. It argues that changing economic conditions empowered reformist state actors, and that they have played a central and largely autonomous role in driving the substantial institutional change underway in contemporary capitalism. The analysis also suggests that political conflict over corporate governance is likely to intensify, on the right and the left, as it impinges on the basic allocation of power within corporations and thus the political economy.

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Articles
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Copyright © 2006 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

1 The term “finance capitalism” was coined in the early twentieth century by the German Socialist, Rudolph Hilferding. Hilferding used the phrase to denote a German economy dominated by monopolistic enterprises with strong financial linkages to major banks (and often to each other), which verged on socialism in its concentration of industrial and financial organization and power. As conceived here, finance capitalism designates economic conditions that are increasingly competitive and a loosening of ties between financial and industrial capital, hence between investors and managers. Contemporary finance capitalism entails the expansion and deepening of markets through more extensive regulation of the corporate firm's financial and governance practices. In many ways, it is the antithesis of Hilferding's original conception.Google Scholar

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30 Cioffi, , Irresistible Forces and Political Obstacles, supra note 19.Google Scholar

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59 Commitment to European integration played an important role in promoting financial market and corporate governance reform, but support for EU legal harmonization and the Single Market Program did not extend to takeover and company law reform. As shown above, domestic politics governed the outcome of these policy debates.Google Scholar

60 The prospect of labor market, pension, and social welfare reforms in Germany under the SPD's “Agenda 2010” further reinforce the impression that the German social market economy is now at a critical juncture.Google Scholar

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