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Lawrence E. Mitchell

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Toward A New Law And Economics: The Case Of The Stock Market, Lawrence E. Mitchell Feb 2010

Toward A New Law And Economics: The Case Of The Stock Market, Lawrence E. Mitchell

Lawrence E. Mitchell

Toward a New Law and Economics: The Case of the Stock Market

Abstract

Do the public equity markets play the macroeconomic role we believe them to play? What is the relationship between the U.S. public equity markets and American economic growth? What do these conclusions teach us about the approaches we take and should take in evaluating and designing the laws of corporate governance and securities regulation?

The law and economics paradigm of the last forty years may be mistaken in assuming that economic efficiency on an individual (or institutional) level is sufficient to ensure economic welfare on a macroeconomic …


The Legitimate Rights Of Public Shareholders, Lawrence E. Mitchell Mar 2009

The Legitimate Rights Of Public Shareholders, Lawrence E. Mitchell

Lawrence E. Mitchell

In recent years there has been significant ongoing academic debate over the expansion of public shareholders’ participation rights in corporate governance. The debate has accompanied a dramatic increase in institutional shareholder and hedge fund activism attempting to influence the conduct of corporate affairs.

The legitimacy of shareholder participation rights depends upon the actual role public shareholders play in contributing to the corporation’s function of providing goods and services and, ultimately, to economic growth and social welfare. Nobody in the debate has stopped to examine this question. This paper presents original empirical evidence that demonstrates that public shareholders do not, on …


The Legitimate Rights Of Public Shareholders, Lawrence E. Mitchell Mar 2009

The Legitimate Rights Of Public Shareholders, Lawrence E. Mitchell

Lawrence E. Mitchell

In recent years there has been significant ongoing academic debate over the expansion of public shareholders’ participation rights in corporate governance. The debate has accompanied a dramatic increase in institutional shareholder and hedge fund activism attempting to influence the conduct of corporate affairs.

The legitimacy of shareholder participation rights depends upon the actual role public shareholders play in contributing to the corporation’s function of providing goods and services and, ultimately, to economic growth and social welfare. Nobody in the debate has stopped to examine this question. This paper presents original empirical evidence that demonstrates that public shareholders do not, on …


The Legitimate Rights Of Public Shareholders, Lawrence E. Mitchell Mar 2009

The Legitimate Rights Of Public Shareholders, Lawrence E. Mitchell

Lawrence E. Mitchell

In recent years there has been significant ongoing academic debate over the expansion of public shareholders’ participation rights in corporate governance. The debate has accompanied a dramatic increase in institutional shareholder and hedge fund activism attempting to influence the conduct of corporate affairs.

The legitimacy of shareholder participation rights depends upon the actual role public shareholders play in contributing to the corporation’s function of providing goods and services and, ultimately, to economic growth and social welfare. Nobody in the debate has stopped to examine this question. This paper presents original empirical evidence that demonstrates that public shareholders do not, on …


Who Needs The Stock Market? Part I: The Empirical Evidence, Lawrence E. Mitchell Oct 2008

Who Needs The Stock Market? Part I: The Empirical Evidence, Lawrence E. Mitchell

Lawrence E. Mitchell

Data on historical and current corporate finance trends drawn from a variety of sources present a paradox. External equity has never played a significant role in financing industrial enterprises in the United States. The only American industry that has relied heavily upon external financing is the finance industry itself. Yet it is commonly accepted among legal scholars and economists that the stock market plays a valuable role in American economic life, and a recent, large body of macroeconomic work on economic development links the growth of financial institutions (including, in the U.S, the stock market) to growth in real economic …