After Enron: Improving Corporate Law and Modernising Securities Regulation in Europe and the US
By (Author) John Armour
Edited by Joseph A McCahery
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
14th November 2006
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
346.066
Paperback
728
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 36mm
At the end of the twentieth century, it was thought by many that the Anglo-American system of corporate governance was performing effectively. Some observers claimed to see an international trend towards convergence around this model, in which firms raise finance on capital markets from dispersed investors, and corporate governance seeks to keep managers accountable to shareholders. There can be no denying that the recent corporate governance crisis in the US - Enron and related scandals - has caused many to question their faith in this view. This collection of essays provide a comprehensive attempt to answer the following questions: firstly, what went wrong - when and why do markets misprice the value of firms, and what was wrong with the incentives set by Enron Secondly, what has been done in response, and how well will it work - including essays on the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in the US, UK company law reform and European company law and auditor liability reform, along with a consideration of corporate governance reforms in historical perspective. Three approaches emerge. The first two share the premise that the system is fundamentally sound, but part ways over whether a regulatory response is required. The first view argues that the events of the 'fall' have indicated a need for greater regulation to curb the excesses of the market. The second view suggests that Enron was merely an aberration, which 'self-corrected' anyway, and consequently the regulatory response has been unnecessarily restrictive. The third view, in contrast, argues that the various scandals demonstrate fundamental weaknesses in the Anglo-American system itself, which cannot hope to be repaired by the sort of reforms that have taken place. It is for the reader, and ultimately history, to decide which view is correct.
covers a wide range of issues and succeeds in touching upon the critical areas, which need further analysisan important contribution to the corporate law literature. -- Stelios Andreadakis * International and Comparative Law Quarterly, Vol 57 *
This is an important bookthe standing of the contributors is such that the book provides an excellent overview of current thinking in this area of corporate lawHart Publishing and the editors of this volume are to be congratulated for the important contribution that After Enron has made to contemporary corporate law reform debates. -- Roman Tomasic * Australian Journal of Corporate Law *
John Armour is University Senior Lecturer in Law, Cambridge University and research associate at the Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge. Joseph A McCahery is Professor of Corporate Governance and Business Innovation at the University of Amsterdam Faculty of Economics and Econometrics and Professor of International Business Law at Tilburg University Faculty of Law.