Predatory Value Extraction

How the Looting of the Business Corporation Became the Us Norm and How Sustainable Prosperity Can Be Restored
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Gewicht:
513 g
Format:
241x158x22 mm
Beschreibung:

William Lazonick is President of the Academic-Industry Research Network and Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts. He has professorial affiliations with SOAS, University of London, and Institut Mines-Télécom in Paris. His research focuses on the social conditions of innovation, socioeconomic mobility, employment opportunity, income distribution, and economic development in advanced and emerging economies.

Jang-Sup Shin is professpr of Economics at the National University of Singapore. His research interests include East Asian economic growth, financial crises and restucturing, technology and innovation, competitive strategies, and organizations of firms. He has previously served as a part-time economic advisor to the Finance Minister of Korea, as well as an editorial writer for Maeli Business Newspaper, a leading economic newspaper in Korea. crises and restucturing.


This book explains how an ideology of corporate resource allocation known as 'maximizing shareholder value' (MSV) that emerged in the 1980s undermined the social foundations of sustainable prosperity in the United States, resulting in rising inequality and slow productivity growth, and sets out an agenda for restoring sustainable prosperity.
  • 1: The Growing Imbalance between Value Creation and Value Extraction

  • 2: The Business Enterprise as a Value-Creating Organization

  • 3: The Stock Market as a Value-Extracting Institution

  • 4: The Value-Extracting Insiders

  • 5: The Value-Extracting Enablers

  • 6: The Value-extracting Outsiders

  • 7: Innovative Enterprise Solves the Agency Problem

  • 8: Reversing Predatory Value Extraction

Predatory Value Extraction explains how an ideology of corporate resource allocation known as 'maximizing shareholder value' (MSV) that emerged in the 1980s came to dominate strategic thinking in business schools and corporate boardrooms in the United States. Undermining the social foundations of sustainable prosperity, it resulted in employment instability, income inequity, and slow productivity growth. In explaining what happened to sustainable prosperity, William Lazonick and Jang-Sup Shin focus on the growing imbalance between value creation and value extraction in the U.S. economy, and the corporate-governance institutions that determine this balance in the nation's major business corporations. The imbalance has become so extreme that predatory value extraction is now a central economic activity, to the point at which the U.S. economy as a whole can be aptly described as a value-extracting economy.

Balancing the contributions of economic actors to value creation with their power to extract value provides the foundation for stable and equitable economic growth. When certain economic actors are able to assert their power to extract far more value than they contribute to the value-creation process, an imbalance occurs which, when extreme, leads to dire economic, political, and social consequences. This book not only explores these consequences, but also sets out an agenda for restoring sustainable prosperity.

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