Kershaw, David
(2015)
Corporate law and self-regulation.
LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Paper Series, 5/2015.
London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK.
Abstract
This paper explores the different ways in which market actors are “co-opted” as corporate law regulators. It considers the the preconditions for generating “endogenous self-regulation” through the lens of the formation and operation of the UK Takeover Code and Panel. The paper argues that its incontrovertible success as a command, control and surveillance regulator is in large part attributable to merchant (investment) banking control over the production of the original Code and the ways in which the Code generates direct and indirect income opportunities for investment bankers in takeover activity, referred to in the paper as “bribing the quarterback”. The paper also uses the Takeover Panel example to explore the unexpected regulatory biases that are generated by the survival and legitimacy concerns of the self-regulator itself. From endogenous self-regulation, the paper moves onto consider “market-controlled” regulation where the state directly co-opts market actors as regualators. Using the example of “comply or explain” corporate governance codes the paper explores the powerful market-based enforcement drivers and argues that these drivers interact with a “comply or explain” regulatory outlook that is likely to, and does, lead to sub-optimal regulation that overweights accountability concerns. Setting these regulatory effects alongside the regulatory biases identified in the analysis of the Takeover Code, the paper shows that the regulatory biases generated by self-regulation are more muli-faceted than, and often inconsistent with, the standard account that self-regulation is likely to generate rules that favour the regulated.
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