March 2021

On Saturday, March 6, 2021, 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm (Eastern Time) the following presentations/discussions are scheduled as part of the next Society of Socio-Economists Meeting (Zoom link and additional information here).

1:00 – 1:30 Welcoming Remarks, Discussion of Pressing Social Issues and Future Meetings

1:30 – 2:25 Ethical Dimensions of Economic Analysis

Deirdre McCloskey (Economics, History and Communication, Emerita, Illinois-Chicago)

Shubha Ghosh (Law and Economics, Syracuse)

2:30 – 3:25 Modern Monetary Theory: Is Money Debt? Does it Matter? Who Decides When the Economy is at Full Capacity?

Rohan Gray (Law, Willamette)

William Black (Law and Economics, Missouri – Kansas City)

Philip Harvey (Law and Economics, Rutgers – Camden)

Nicolaus Tideman (Economics, Virginia Tech)

3:00 – 3:25 Continuation of Discussion of Pressing Social Issues and Future Meetings

3:30 – 3:50 For Whose Benefit Public Corporations?

Sergio Gramitto (Law, Monash) “The Corporate Governance Game”

3:50 – 4:00 Concluding Session.

Friend of the BLPB Greg Shill‘s recent article, The Independent Board as Shield, is an engaging, provocative piece on board independence and the business judgment rule.  The abstract provides a taste of his argument and principal related proposal.

The fiduciary duty of loyalty bars CEOs and other executives from managing companies for personal gain. In the modern public corporation, this restriction is reinforced by a pair of institutions: the independent board of directors and the business judgment rule. In isolation, each structure arguably promotes manager fidelity to shareholder interests—but together, they enable manager prioritization. This marks a particularly striking turn for the independent board. Its origin story and raison d’être lie in protecting shareholders from opportunism by managers, but it functions as a shield for managers instead.

Numerous defects in the design and practice of the independent board inhibit its ability to curb managerial excess. Nowhere is this more evident than in the context of transactions that enrich the CEO. When executive compensation and similar matters are approved by independent directors, they take on a new quality: they become insulated by the business judgment rule. This rule is commonly justified as giving legal effect to the comparative advantage