Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: KRUGMAN: The Fake Skills Shortage [View all]HughBeaumont
(24,461 posts)46. Especially galling is that "Fiduciary Duty to the shareholders" is a MYTH.
http://www.alternet.org/economy/dumbest-idea-world-corporate-americas-false-and-dangerous-ideology-shareholder-value?paging=off
Shareholder value thinking is endemic in the business world today. Fifty years ago, if you had asked the directors or CEO of a large public company what the companys purpose was, you might have been told the corporation had many purposes: to provide equity investors with solid returns, but also to build great products, to provide decent livelihoods for employees, and to contribute to the community and the nation. Today, you are likely to be told the company has but one purpose, to maximize its shareholders wealth. This sort of thinking drives directors and executives to run public firms like BP with a relentless focus on raising stock price. In the quest to unlock shareholder value they sell key assets, fire loyal employees, and ruthlessly squeeze the workforce that remains; cut back on product support, customer assistance, and research and development; delay replacing outworn, out- moded, and unsafe equipment; shower CEOs with stock options and expensive pay packages to incentivize them; drain cash reserves to pay large dividends and repurchase company shares, leveraging firms until they teeter on the brink of insolvency; and lobby regulators and Congress to change the law so they can chase short-term profits speculating in credit default swaps and other high-risk financial derivatives. They do these things even though many individual directors and executives feel uneasy about such strategies, intuiting that a single-minded focus on share price may not serve the interests of society, the company, or shareholders themselves.
This book examines and challenges the doctrine of shareholder value. It argues that shareholder value ideology is just thatan ideology, not a legal requirement or a practical necessity of modern business life. United States corporate law does not, and never has, required directors of public corporations to maximize either share price or shareholder wealth. To the contrary, as long as boards do not use their power to enrich themselves, the law gives them a wide range of discretion to run public corporations with other goals in mind, including growing the firm, creating quality products, protecting employees, and serving the public interest. Chasing shareholder value is a managerial choice, not a legal requirement.
Snip
Today, questions seem called for. It should be apparent to anyone who reads the newspapers that Corporate Americas mass embrace of shareholder value thinking has not translated into better corporate or economic performance. The past dozen years have seen a daisy chain of costly corporate disasters, from massive frauds at Enron, HealthSouth, and Worldcom in the early 2000s, to the near-failure and subsequent costly taxpayer bailout of many of our largest financial institutions in 2008, to the BP oil spill in 2010. Stock market returns have been miserable, raising the question of how aging baby boom- ers who trusted in stocks for their retirement will be able to support themselves in their golden years. The population of publicly held U.S. companies is shrinking rapidly as for- merly public companies like Dunkin Donuts and ToysRUs go private to escape the pressures of shareholder-primacy thinking, and new enterprises decide not to sell shares to outside investors at all. (Between 1997 and 2008, the number of companies listed on U.S. exchanges declined from 8,823 to only 5,401.)5 Some experts worry Americas public corporations are losing their innovative edge. The National Commission found that an underlying cause of the Deepwater Horizon disaster was the fact that the oil and gas industry has cut back significantly on research in recent decades, with the result that knowledge and experience within the industry may be decreasing."
This book examines and challenges the doctrine of shareholder value. It argues that shareholder value ideology is just thatan ideology, not a legal requirement or a practical necessity of modern business life. United States corporate law does not, and never has, required directors of public corporations to maximize either share price or shareholder wealth. To the contrary, as long as boards do not use their power to enrich themselves, the law gives them a wide range of discretion to run public corporations with other goals in mind, including growing the firm, creating quality products, protecting employees, and serving the public interest. Chasing shareholder value is a managerial choice, not a legal requirement.
Snip
Today, questions seem called for. It should be apparent to anyone who reads the newspapers that Corporate Americas mass embrace of shareholder value thinking has not translated into better corporate or economic performance. The past dozen years have seen a daisy chain of costly corporate disasters, from massive frauds at Enron, HealthSouth, and Worldcom in the early 2000s, to the near-failure and subsequent costly taxpayer bailout of many of our largest financial institutions in 2008, to the BP oil spill in 2010. Stock market returns have been miserable, raising the question of how aging baby boom- ers who trusted in stocks for their retirement will be able to support themselves in their golden years. The population of publicly held U.S. companies is shrinking rapidly as for- merly public companies like Dunkin Donuts and ToysRUs go private to escape the pressures of shareholder-primacy thinking, and new enterprises decide not to sell shares to outside investors at all. (Between 1997 and 2008, the number of companies listed on U.S. exchanges declined from 8,823 to only 5,401.)5 Some experts worry Americas public corporations are losing their innovative edge. The National Commission found that an underlying cause of the Deepwater Horizon disaster was the fact that the oil and gas industry has cut back significantly on research in recent decades, with the result that knowledge and experience within the industry may be decreasing."
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
68 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
we need awareness. People don't understand the problem--especially engineers who haven't been hit.
antigop
Apr 2013
#26
Years ago when I started working we were trained on the job. How come they don't do that now?
Harriety
Apr 2013
#9
The current generation of middle managers was trained to focus exclusively on the numbers
Lydia Leftcoast
Apr 2013
#14
Especially galling is that "Fiduciary Duty to the shareholders" is a MYTH.
HughBeaumont
Apr 2013
#46
"taught to...regard the prosperity of the shareholders as their ONLY priority."
woo me with science
Apr 2013
#57
When you glut the market, you drive down wages. When you over focus on degrees
TheKentuckian
Apr 2013
#59
Yes theres a shortage of Cisco network engineers willing to work in the $15-$18/hr range
undeterred
Apr 2013
#11
I keep getting calls from recruiters asking for senior mechanical engineers, with MSME, to
Flatulo
Apr 2013
#13
On a slightly related note, my son is getting his masters in paralegal studies this spring. He's
Flatulo
Apr 2013
#15
The Democrats like this because they can push for more education funding...
Spitfire of ATJ
Apr 2013
#18
What gets me is how Republicans put people in agencies to destroy them from within,..
Spitfire of ATJ
Apr 2013
#62
Different regions have different industries and attract different people.
Sen. Walter Sobchak
Apr 2013
#41
Yes and the one before that asked you what you were offering the hipster dickheads to move across
whttevrr
Apr 2013
#60
You are clearly having a conversation with someone else. Don't let me interrupt.
Sen. Walter Sobchak
Apr 2013
#63