中左翼政治与公司治理:什么是“进步”议程?

Christopher M. Bruner
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引用次数: 8

摘要

只要公司存在,学者、法官和政策制定者之间就一直在争论如何最好地描述公司的形式和功能,以及如何最好地组织各种利益相关者之间的关系,这是一个积极的问题。考虑到控制巨大且不断增长的“公司”资源所涉及的经济和政治利益,这并不令人惊讶,而且用明确的政治术语谈论公司法的各种方法已成为司空见惯的事情。特别是,在公司决策应该指向的目标这一基本规范问题上,股东为中心的公司概念长期以来被描述为政治上的右倾,而利益相关者为导向的概念则被反过来描述为政治上的左倾。然而,当这种规范性辩论的参考框架从州公司法转移开时,一个奇怪的逆转就发生了。值得注意的是,当辩论转移到联邦政治和司法背景时,人们经常发现与政治左派有关的行动者支持扩大股东的公司治理权力,而与政治右翼有关的行动者则提出了更多以利益相关者为中心的公司概念。本文的目的是解释这种脱节,并探讨其对美国公司治理发展的影响,特别是参考政治左派的各种和不断发展的公司治理观点-我认为,近几十年来发生了更戏剧性和更具启发性的转变,州/联邦的分歧更难以解释。民主党广泛而根本地向明确的中间派国家政治重新定位,从根本上改变了公司治理和相关问题在组建一个能够吸引工薪阶层和中产阶级选民的竞争性联盟项目中的作用。与制约和激励这一转变的法律、监管和制度框架以及经济和文化趋势作斗争,对于理解州/联邦在“进步”公司治理议程应该是什么以及随着民主党制定对2016年11月大选的回应,情况可能如何变化方面的分歧至关重要。我从一个简短的术语讨论开始,研究与政治左派相关的各种标签如何在相关背景下使用,以及定义“公司治理”领域本身的不同方式。然后,我概述了在州公司法背景下关于公司治理的“进步”思想,并将这些观点与联邦层面上与中左翼政治行动者相关的截然不同的观点进行了对比。基于这一描述,我接着研究了各种法律、监管和制度框架,以及重要的经济和文化趋势,它们在促使和/或加剧州/联邦分歧方面发挥了重要作用。其中包括州公司法和联邦证券监管之间的根本区别;特拉华州和华盛顿特区立法者的不同立场;机构投资者的兴起;劳工组织利益的演变;公司外监管的某些意想不到的后果;以及民主党自20世纪80年代末以来的急剧右倾。文章最后简要讨论了州/联邦趋同的前景,得出的结论是,在可预见的未来,美国公司治理体系在理论上可能仍然不连贯,因为相关行为者的范围非常广泛,而且在他们所居住的非常不同的法律和政治环境中,根本不同的力量在起作用。
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Center-Left Politics and Corporate Governance: What Is the 'Progressive' Agenda?
For as long as corporations have existed, debates have persisted among scholars, judges, and policymakers regarding how best to describe their form and function as a positive matter, and how best to organize relations among their various stakeholders as a normative matter. This is hardly surprising given the economic and political stakes involved with control over vast and growing "corporate" resources, and it has become commonplace to speak of various approaches to corporate law in decidedly political terms. In particular, on the fundamental normative issue of the aims to which corporate decision-making ought to be directed, shareholder-centric conceptions of the corporation have long been described as politically right-leaning while stakeholder-oriented conceptions have conversely been described as politically left-leaning. When the frame of reference for this normative debate shifts away from state corporate law, however, a curious reversal occurs. Notably, when the debate shifts to federal political and judicial contexts, one often finds actors associated with the political left championing expansion of shareholders' corporate governance powers, and those associated with the political right advancing more stakeholder-centric conceptions of the corporation. The aim of this article is to explain this disconnect and explore its implications for the development of U.S. corporate governance, with particular reference to the varied and evolving corporate governance views of the political left - the side of the spectrum where, I argue, the more dramatic and illuminating shifts have occurred over recent decades, and where the state/federal divide is more difficult to explain. A widespread and fundamental reorientation of the Democratic Party toward decidedly centrist national politics fundamentally altered the role of corporate governance and related issues in the project of assembling a competitive coalition capable of appealing to working- and middle-class voters. Grappling with the legal, regulatory, and institutional frameworks - as well as the economic and cultural trends - that conditioned and incentivized this shift will prove critical to understanding the state/federal divide regarding what the "progressive" corporate governance agenda ought to be and how the situation might change as the Democratic Party formulates responses to the November 2016 election. I begin with a brief terminological discussion, examining how various labels associated with the political left tend to be employed in relevant contexts, as well as varying ways of defining the field of "corporate governance" itself. I then provide an overview of "progressive" thinking about corporate governance in the context of state corporate law, contrasting those views with the very different perspectives associated with center-left political actors at the federal level. Based on this descriptive account, I then examine various legal, regulatory, and institutional frameworks, as well as important economic and cultural trends, that have played consequential roles in prompting and/or exacerbating the state/federal divide. These include fundamental distinctions between state corporate law and federal securities regulation; the differing postures of lawmakers in Delaware and Washington, DC; the rise of institutional investors; the evolution of organized labor interests; certain unintended consequences of extra-corporate regulation; and the Democratic Party's sharp rightward shift since the late 1980s. The article closes with a brief discussion of the prospects for state/federal convergence, concluding that the U.S. corporate governance system will likely remain theoretically incoherent for the foreseeable future due to the extraordinary range of relevant actors and the fundamentally divergent forces at work in the very different legal and political settings they inhabit.
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