Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9726178 International Review of Law and Economics 2005 28 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper analyses changes in the German corporate governance system in the 1990s, using a functional perspective that separates the functions of governance from the institutions that perform these functions. Financial globalization, harmonized legislation within the European Union, and domestic pressures have triggered a move away from the postwar German system of bank-based governance, and towards more market-oriented processes. The paper shows that these forces have resulted in heightening transparency, more active capital markets, and a greatly reduced role of banks in the governance process. However, Germany's 2002 boycott of EU takeover legislation has created a void in the current governance system: because bank intervention and the market for corporate control are substitutes, a reduced role of a banks and protective takeover legislation mean that one important governance function is currently underserved.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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