2004
DOI: 10.1287/orsc.1040.0068
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The Corporate Objective Revisited

Abstract: T he stock market convulsions and corporate scandals of 2001 and 2002 have reignited debate on the purposes of the corporation and, in particular, the goal of shareholder value maximization. We revisit the debate, re-examine the traditional rationales, and develop a set of new arguments for why the preferred objective function for the corporation must unambiguously continue to be the one that says "maximize shareholder value." We trace the origins of the debates from the late nineteenth century, their implicat… Show more

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Cited by 553 publications
(262 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
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“…As the appropriate citations in that section point out, our arguments are simply a synthesis of well-known corporate law scholars' views that nonshareowning stakeholders have judicial recourse through invocation of contract and tort laws that shareholders in their dealings with the corporation typically do not. Freeman et al do the same with Point 4 (Sundaram and Inkpen 2004), which argues that it is easier for nonshareowning stakeholders to become shareholders than the reverse. Surely, for example, it is far easier for an employee or supplier to become a shareholder than for a shareholder to become an employee or supplier of the corporation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…As the appropriate citations in that section point out, our arguments are simply a synthesis of well-known corporate law scholars' views that nonshareowning stakeholders have judicial recourse through invocation of contract and tort laws that shareholders in their dealings with the corporation typically do not. Freeman et al do the same with Point 4 (Sundaram and Inkpen 2004), which argues that it is easier for nonshareowning stakeholders to become shareholders than the reverse. Surely, for example, it is far easier for an employee or supplier to become a shareholder than for a shareholder to become an employee or supplier of the corporation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…For instance, Point 5 in our paper (Sundaram and Inkpen 2004), which argues that stakeholders have remedies that shareholders do not have, addresses the limitedness of shareholders' legal recourse. In suggesting that Point 5 involves asset specificity, Freeman et al (2004) seem to misinterpret the foundations of our reasoning.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Fruto de los escándalos corporativos que ocurrieron en Estados Unidos durante los años 2001 y 2002, Sundaram & Inkpen (2004) hicieron una revisión del debate acerca de los propósitos corporativos y concluyeron que la maximización de valor para el accionista es la mejor opción, ya que las críticas relacionadas con los incentivos de transferencias y las implicaciones de las fallas contractuales no son exclusivas de los accionistas, sino que pueden suceder con cualquier grupo de interés. Frente a esta postura Freeman, Wicks y Parmar (2004) concluyeron que la meta de crear valor para los grupos de interés mejora la creación de valor para los accionistas, a su vez crea incentivos apropiados para que los directivos asuman riesgos empresariales, y clarifica la elección de los medios para el logro de los objetivos.…”
Section: Creación De Valor: ¿Para Quién?unclassified
“…Proponents of the former assert that executive decision-making should focus exclusively on maximizing shareholder value (e.g., Levitt 1958;McCloskey 1998;Sundaram and Inkpen 2004). The most prominent advocate was the late Milton Friedman, who argued that ''[t]here is one and only one social responsibility of business-to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game' ' (1970, p. 6).…”
Section: Leaders' Responsibility Orientations and Underlying Assumptimentioning
confidence: 99%