The evolution of closely held business forms in Europe

J. McCahery, E. Vermeulen
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引用次数: 20

Abstract

I. INTRODUCTION This Article grows out of the ongoing debate among European academics on the need to expand the menu of available business organization forms to meet the needs of firms at all levels. Advocates of such reforms claim that company law structures in Europe, which provide a highly developed legal framework and limited liability, are cumbersome and costly for closely held firms to apply. Commentators who favor reform suggest that lawmakers address these problems by devising new business organization statutes that are more varied, less complex, and can potentially enhance efficient outcomes. Traditionally, the business organization law available to small businesses has been structured around the needs of larger, publicly owned firms. In most jurisdictions, closely held business forms are burdened by a number of regulatory requirements which cause firms to incur substantial costs in carrying out their normal business activities. Moreover, the imposition of many of the European Community's harmonized company law provisions on small firms is viewed as disproportionate and over-regulatory, and tends to impede the development of an efficient supply of legal rules. The current debate on the regulation of closely held firms can be explained in terms of a tradeoff between the need for creditor protection in case of firm failure and the commitment to supply legal rules which enable owners to maximize wealth.1 European scholars who express concern about the importance of mandatory requirements as a mechanism to protect creditors and other interests in the firm have justified harmonized rules as a means to avoid a race to the bottom.2 According to this view the mandatory rules, such as minimum capital requirements, disclosure rules, and accounting rules, play a fundamental role in the development of corporate law.3 This position is rhetorically forceful because it relies on the idea of uniformity to provide a basis for creditor protection, but it is conceptually limited by the bargaining problems that creditors inevitably face. The law and economics perspective stands in contrast to the European Community's uniform approach. A large body of work has focused on the costs and benefits of uniformity. On the one hand, uniform rules have the advantage of simplicity and lower administrative costs. Moreover, uniform rules are more appealing to the extent that the benefits of regulation are the same for all firms. On the other hand, uniform rules lead to higher costs for different types of firms. If firms are heterogeneous, efficient regulation calls for the provision of diverse menus of rules in order to reduce the risk of suboptimal uniformity. In the E.C. context, the common thread in this body of work has been the effort to demonstrate that harmonized rules are cumbersome and costly measures which are not sufficient to regulate externality problems. For instance, minimum capital requirements aimed at protecting the welfare of creditors are costly and haphazard restrictions which interfere with private orderings.4 Consequently, the ability of private parties to obtain superior protection in the market demonstrates that, in certain circumstances, the E.C. mandatory law framework cannot be an efficient approach to limit externalities for closely held firms. More recently, the relative merits of designing legal rules aimed at the needs of the closely held firm has been stimulated by product and capital market pressures to supply the most competitive business statute for small and medium businesses (SME).5 While scholars have debated the advantages of close corporation statutes for more than a decade, the discussion of competition-based lawmaking for limited liability companies in Europe represents a new departure. Given the presence of market-driven pressures, monopolistic regulators are being forced to make changes in their corporate law regimes. However, in the absence of freedom of choice in corporate law, it cannot be assumed that lawmakers will generate optimal business law forms for different types of firms. …
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欧洲少数人持股商业形式的演变
本文源于欧洲学术界正在进行的一场辩论,即有必要扩大现有企业组织形式的范围,以满足各层次企业的需求。这种改革的倡导者声称,欧洲的公司法结构提供了高度发达的法律框架和有限责任,对于少数人持股的公司来说,适用这种结构既繁琐又昂贵。支持改革的评论人士建议,立法者通过制定更加多样化、不那么复杂、可能提高效率的新商业组织法规来解决这些问题。传统上,适用于小企业的商业组织法是围绕大型上市公司的需求制定的。在大多数司法管辖区,少数人持有的商业形式受到许多监管要求的限制,导致公司在开展正常业务活动时产生大量成本。此外,将欧洲共同体的许多统一公司法规定强加于小公司被认为是不成比例的和管制过度的,而且往往阻碍有效提供法律规则的发展。当前关于监管少数人持股公司的辩论可以解释为在公司倒闭时需要债权人保护和承诺提供使所有者能够实现财富最大化的法律规则之间的权衡欧洲学者对强制性要求作为一种保护债权人和公司其他利益的机制的重要性表示担忧,他们认为协调一致的规则是避免逐底竞争的一种手段根据这一观点,强制性规则,如最低资本要求、披露规则和会计规则,在公司法的发展中起着根本性的作用这一立场在修辞上是强有力的,因为它依赖于统一的理念来为债权人提供保护的基础,但它在概念上受到债权人不可避免地面临的讨价还价问题的限制。法律和经济学的观点与欧洲共同体的统一做法形成对比。大量的工作集中在统一的成本和收益上。一方面,统一规则具有简单、管理成本低的优点。此外,统一的规则更有吸引力,因为监管的好处对所有公司都是一样的。另一方面,统一的规则导致不同类型的公司成本更高。如果公司是异质的,有效的监管要求提供不同的规则菜单,以减少次优一致性的风险。在欧共体的背景下,这项工作的共同主线是努力证明协调规则是繁琐和昂贵的措施,不足以调节外部性问题。例如,旨在保护债权人福利的最低资本要求是代价高昂和随意的限制,干扰了私人秩序因此,私人各方在市场中获得优越保护的能力表明,在某些情况下,欧盟强制性法律框架不能成为限制封闭式公司外部性的有效方法。最近,由于产品和资本市场的压力,要求为中小型企业提供最具竞争力的商业法规,设计针对少数公司需要的法律规则的相对优点得到了刺激十多年来,学者们一直在讨论封闭型公司法规的优势,但关于欧洲有限责任公司基于竞争的立法的讨论代表了一个新的起点。鉴于存在市场驱动的压力,垄断监管机构正被迫对其公司法制度进行改革。然而,在公司法缺乏选择自由的情况下,不能假设立法者会为不同类型的公司制定最优的商业法律形式。…
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