Corporate governance and wealth and income inequality

被引:13
作者
Brou, Daniel [1 ]
Chatterjee, Aroop [2 ]
Coakley, Jerry [3 ]
Girardone, Claudia [3 ]
Wood, Geoffrey [1 ]
机构
[1] Western Univ, DAN Management & Org Studies, London, ON, Canada
[2] Univ Witwatersrand, Southern Ctr Inequal Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa
[3] Univ Essex, Essex Business Sch, Colchester CO4 3SQ, Essex, England
基金
英国科研创新办公室;
关键词
corporate governance; inequality; review; CEO PAY; EXECUTIVE-COMPENSATION; SHAREHOLDER VALUE; GENDER DIVERSITY; WAGE INEQUALITY; UNITED-STATES; CAPITALISM; VARIETIES; INCENTIVES; LABOR;
D O I
10.1111/corg.12391
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Research Question/Issue There has been growing concern about rising social inequality and its effects on general well-being and the polity. Much of this rise can be traced to changes in the manner in which corporations or firms are governed and how this impacts on income and wealth dispersion. This study systematically reviews the most recent literature on external and internal corporate governance (CG) that deals with the issue of income and wealth inequality. Research Findings/Insights External mechanisms such as institutional regime (defined in terms of varieties of capitalism-liberal or coordinated markets) and financialization reveal important insights, often implicitly, into what makes or sustains inequality. The rise of the platform business model raises explicit concerns about increasing wealth and wage inequality. This is because it is associated with a rapidly growing precariat of gig workers, Big Tech entrepreneurs with untrammeled levels of control and extreme levels of personal wealth, and widespread tax avoidance despite record profits. The literature on internal CG is somewhat constrained in its reliance on agency theory and a focus on shareholder primacy. This only provides limited insights on how internal CG mechanisms impact on inequality. However, in recent work, the issue of perverse incentives posed by CEO reward systems and their impact on organizational sustainability and wage dispersion are receiving increasing attention. Theoretical/Academic Implications Some studies do attempt to widen the lens, and we suggest a greater focus on theorizing codetermination and alternate forms of ownership, non-monetary incentives, the power of the Big Tech companies, and those strands of comparative institutional analyses that explore the determinants of internal CG structures. Practitioner/Policy Implications The study reasserts the importance of the firm as a central analytical paradigm in understanding income and wealth inequality and that, in seeking to ameliorate the latter's negative consequences, more attention needs to be accorded to the governance and regulation of firms.
引用
收藏
页码:612 / 629
页数:18
相关论文
共 172 条
[41]   Globalization and the Provision of Incentives inside the Firm: The Effect of Foreign Competition [J].
Cunat, Vicente ;
Guadalupe, Maria .
JOURNAL OF LABOR ECONOMICS, 2009, 27 (02) :179-212
[42]  
Davis G.F., 2015, PERFORMANCE PROGR ES, P395
[43]  
Davis G.F., 2017, SAGE HDB ORG I, P689
[44]   FINANCIALIZATION AND INVESTMENT: A SURVEY OF THE EMPIRICAL LITERATURE [J].
Davis, Leila E. .
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC SURVEYS, 2017, 31 (05) :1332-1358
[45]   Obscured Transparency? Compensation Benchmarking and the Biasing of Executive Pay [J].
de Vaan, Mathijs ;
Elbers, Benjamin ;
DiPrete, Thomas A. .
MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2019, 65 (09) :4299-4317
[46]   What has sociology to contribute to the study of inequality trends? A historical and comparative perspective [J].
DiPrete, Thomas A. .
AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 2007, 50 (05) :603-618
[47]   Compensation Benchmarking, Leapfrogs, and the Surge in Executive Pay [J].
DiPrete, Thomas A. ;
Eirich, Gregory M. ;
Pittinsky, Matthew .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, 2010, 115 (06) :1671-1712
[48]  
Dow Gregory., 1999, EMPLOYEES CORPORATE, P17
[49]   Organization studies of inequality, with and beyond Piketty [J].
Dunne, Stephen ;
Grady, Jo ;
Weir, Kenneth .
ORGANIZATION, 2018, 25 (02) :165-185
[50]   Executive Compensation: A Modern Primer [J].
Edmans, Alex ;
Gabaix, Xavier .
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC LITERATURE, 2016, 54 (04) :1232-1287