Most pre-crisis explanations of the various corporate governance systems have considered the separation between ownership and control to be an advantage of the Anglo-American economies. They have also attributed the failure of other countries to achieve these efficient arrangements to their different legal and/or electoral systems. In this paper we compare this view with a different approach based on the hypothesis that politics and corporate governance co-evolve, generating complex interactions of financial and labour market institutions. Countries cluster along different complementary politics-business interaction paths and there is no reason to expect, or to device policies for, their convergence to a single model of corporate governance. We argue that this hypothesis provides a more convincing explanation of the past histories of major capitalist economies and can suggest some useful possible scenarios of their future institutional development. Bayesian model comparison suggests that the co-evolution approach turns out at least as influential as the competing theories in explaining shareholder and worker protection determination. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Belloc, M., Pagano, U. (2013). Politics–business co-evolution paths: Workers’ organization and capitalist concentration. INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF LAW AND ECONOMICS, 33, 23-36 [10.1016/j.irle.2012.08.004].

Politics–business co-evolution paths: Workers’ organization and capitalist concentration

Pagano, Ugo
2013-01-01

Abstract

Most pre-crisis explanations of the various corporate governance systems have considered the separation between ownership and control to be an advantage of the Anglo-American economies. They have also attributed the failure of other countries to achieve these efficient arrangements to their different legal and/or electoral systems. In this paper we compare this view with a different approach based on the hypothesis that politics and corporate governance co-evolve, generating complex interactions of financial and labour market institutions. Countries cluster along different complementary politics-business interaction paths and there is no reason to expect, or to device policies for, their convergence to a single model of corporate governance. We argue that this hypothesis provides a more convincing explanation of the past histories of major capitalist economies and can suggest some useful possible scenarios of their future institutional development. Bayesian model comparison suggests that the co-evolution approach turns out at least as influential as the competing theories in explaining shareholder and worker protection determination. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
2013
Belloc, M., Pagano, U. (2013). Politics–business co-evolution paths: Workers’ organization and capitalist concentration. INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF LAW AND ECONOMICS, 33, 23-36 [10.1016/j.irle.2012.08.004].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11365/24679
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