Book contents
- Fiduciary Obligations in Business
- Fiduciary Obligations in Business
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editors’ Acknowledgments
- Introduction The Decline and Rise of Fiduciary Obligations in Business
- Part I Identifying Fiduciaries and Their Duties
- Part II Gaps and Alternatives in Fiduciary Regimes
- Part III Historical and Comparative Perspectives
- Part IV Stakeholders and Society
- 15 Corporations, Directors’ Duties, and the Public/Private Divide
- 16 Stakeholder Impartiality: A New Classic Approach for the Objectives of the Corporation
- 17 Shareholder Primacy in Benefit Corporations
- 18 Self-Interested Fiduciaries and Invulnerable Beneficiaries: When Fiduciary Duties Do Not Fit
- Index
15 - Corporations, Directors’ Duties, and the Public/Private Divide
from Part IV - Stakeholders and Society
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 August 2021
- Fiduciary Obligations in Business
- Fiduciary Obligations in Business
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editors’ Acknowledgments
- Introduction The Decline and Rise of Fiduciary Obligations in Business
- Part I Identifying Fiduciaries and Their Duties
- Part II Gaps and Alternatives in Fiduciary Regimes
- Part III Historical and Comparative Perspectives
- Part IV Stakeholders and Society
- 15 Corporations, Directors’ Duties, and the Public/Private Divide
- 16 Stakeholder Impartiality: A New Classic Approach for the Objectives of the Corporation
- 17 Shareholder Primacy in Benefit Corporations
- 18 Self-Interested Fiduciaries and Invulnerable Beneficiaries: When Fiduciary Duties Do Not Fit
- Index
Summary
Business history and theory reflect a tension between public and private conceptions of the corporation. This is embodied in the famous Berle-Dodd debate, which provides the basis for contemporary clashes between “different visions of corporatism,” such as the conflict between shareholder primacy and stakeholder-centered versions of the corporation. This chapter examines a number of recent developments suggesting that the pendulum, which swung so clearly in favour of a private conception of the corporation from the 1980s onwards, is in the process of changing direction. The chapter provides two central insights. The first is that there is not one problem, but multiple problems in corporate law, and that different problems may come to the forefront at different times. The second insight is that corporate governance techniques (such as performance-based pay), which are designed to ameliorate one problem in corporate law, such as corporate performance, can at the same time exacerbate other problems involving the social impact of corporations.
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- Fiduciary Obligations in Business , pp. 285 - 300Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021