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Corporate Governance Lessons from Transition Economy Reforms

by Merritt B. Fox, Michael A. Heller

In post-socialist countries, corporate finance and transition economics scholars have often done little more than convey the received theory to transition policymakers. This volume focuses on the reverse concern: what, if anything, do the reform experiences of transition countries teach about corporate governance theory more generally?

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

Corporate Governance Lessons from Transition Economy Reforms explores a timely topic at the intersection of economics, law, and policy reform. To date, most sophisticated theoretical work on corporate governance has focused on advanced market economies. In post-socialist countries, corporate finance and transition economics scholars have often done little more than convey the received theory to transition policymakers. This volume focuses, for the first time, on the reverse concern: what, if anything, do the reform experiences of transition countries teach about corporate governance theory more generally? To investigate this question, Merritt Fox and Michael Heller have assembled a stellar group of corporate governance theorists. The answers are startling. The principal essays approach the problem from three complementary perspectives that form the organizing themes of the book. The first part refines core corporate theory terms. The second presents important empirical work that explores the channels through which "good corporate governance" may link to the real economy. The final part links corporate governance theory to practical reforms.After fifteen years of experience, practice can now inform theory. Together, these essays present a comprehensive new view on a provocative theme. Written in an accessible style, they will be of interest to a broad range of scholars, commentators, and policymakers.

Notes

This is a terrific collection of papers on an important topic. Fox and Heller's piece does a wonderful job of clarifying the terms of the debate by showing what is good corporate governance and why we care. -- Edward B. Rock, University of Pennsylvania Law School

Back Cover

"This is a terrific collection of papers on an important topic. Fox and Heller's piece does a wonderful job of clarifying the terms of the debate by showing what is good corporate governance and why we care." --Edward B. Rock, University of Pennsylvania Law School

Flap

"This is a terrific collection of papers on an important topic. Fox and Heller's piece does a wonderful job of clarifying the terms of the debate by showing what is good corporate governance and why we care."-- Edward B. Rock, University of Pennsylvania Law School

Author Biography

Merritt B. Fox is Michael E. Patterson Professor of Law and Co-Director of the Center for Law and Economic Studies at Columbia Law School. He is the author of Finance and Industrial Performance in a Dynamic Economy. Michael A. Heller is Lawrence A. Wein Professor of Real Estate Law at Columbia Law School.

Table of Contents

Introduction vii Part I: Framework Chapter One: What Is Good Corporate Governance? by Merritt B. Fox and Michael A. Heller 3 Part II: The Elements of Good Corporate Governance: Law Chapter Two: Patterns of Legal Change: Shareholder and Creditor Rights in Transition Economies by Katharina Pistor 35 Chapter Three: The Common Law and Economic Growth: Hayek Might Be Right by Paul G. Mahoney 84 Part III: The Elements of Good Corporate Governance: Owners and Managers Chapter Four: Russian Privatization and Corporate Governance: What Went Wrong? by Bernard Black, Reinier Kraakman, and Anna Tarassova 113 Chapter Five: Why Ownership Matters: Entrepreneurship and the Restructuring of Enterprises in Central Europe by Roman Frydman, Marek Hessel, and Andrzej Rapaczynski 194 Part IV: The Elements of Good Corporate Governance: Stock Markets Chapter Six: Corporate Governance in Transitional Economies: Lessons from the Prewar Japanese Cotton Textile Industry by Yoshiro Miwa and J. Mark Ramseyer 231 Chapter Seven: Privatization and Corporate Governance: The Lessons from Securities Market Failure by John C. Coffee, Jr. 265 Chapter Eight: The Information Content of Stock Markets: Why Do Emerging Markets Have Synchronous Stock Price Movements? by Randall Morck, Bernard Yeung, and Wayne Yu 315 Part V: What Does Transition Contribute to Theory? Chapter Nine: Conclusion: The Unexplored Role of Initial Conditions by Merritt B. Fox and Michael A. Heller 367 List of Contributors 405 Index 407

Review

"Outstanding... Corporate Governance Lessons offers many good examples of ... nuanced scholarship... [M]ost of the chapters tackle corporate governance questions from a comparative and historical perspective, allowing the reader to observe cross-national and time-series variations."--Basak Kus, Law and Politics Book Review

Promotional

This is a terrific collection of papers on an important topic. Fox and Heller's piece does a wonderful job of clarifying the terms of the debate by showing what is good corporate governance and why we care. -- Edward B. Rock, University of Pennsylvania Law School

Long Description

Corporate Governance Lessons from Transition Economy Reforms explores a timely topic at the intersection of economics, law, and policy reform. To date, most sophisticated theoretical work on corporate governance has focused on advanced market economies. In post-socialist countries, corporate finance and transition economics scholars have often done little more than convey the received theory to transition policymakers. This volume focuses, for the first time, on the reverse concern: what, if anything, do the reform experiences of transition countries teach about corporate governance theory more generally? To investigate this question, Merritt Fox and Michael Heller have assembled a stellar group of corporate governance theorists. The answers are startling. The principal essays approach the problem from three complementary perspectives that form the organizing themes of the book. The first part refines core corporate theory terms. The second presents important empirical work that explores the channels through which "good corporate governance" may link to the real economy. The final part links corporate governance theory to practical reforms.After fifteen years of experience, practice can now inform theory. Together, these essays present a comprehensive new view on a provocative theme. Written in an accessible style, they will be of interest to a broad range of scholars, commentators, and policymakers.

Review Quote

"This is a terrific collection of papers on an important topic. Fox and Heller's piece does a wonderful job of clarifying the terms of the debate by showing what is good corporate governance and why we care." --Edward B. Rock, University of Pennsylvania Law School

Details

ISBN0691138311
Short Title CORPORATE GOVERNANCE LESSONS F
Publisher Princeton University Press
Language English
ISBN-10 0691138311
ISBN-13 9780691138312
Media Book
Format Paperback
Year 2008
Imprint Princeton University Press
Place of Publication New Jersey
Country of Publication United States
Edited by Merritt B. Fox
Author Michael A. Heller
Translated from English
DOI 10.1604/9780691138312
UK Release Date 2008-11-02
NZ Release Date 2008-11-02
US Release Date 2008-11-02
Pages 432
Publication Date 2008-11-02
Alternative 9780691125619
DEWEY 658.4
Illustrations 8 line illus. 45 tables.
Audience Professional & Vocational
AU Release Date 2009-01-11

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