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What’s the Purpose of the Corporation?  Law & Economics Center at Scalia Law to Hold Luncheon Panel Reflecting on the Debate Generated by the Revolutionary Business Roundtable Statement Made Two Years Ago Next Week

Almost 51 years ago, on September 13, 1970, Milton Friedman published an essay in The New York Times with a title that captured his thesis that “The Social Responsibility Of Business Is to Increase Its Profits.”  This shareholder value maximization metric for evaluating the legal and financial fiduciary duties of corporate officers has served as the dominant paradigm for defining the purpose of the corporation both before and certainly for the fifty years after publication of Friedman’s influential essay.  Yet, on August 19, 2019 – now nearly two years ago – the powerful Business Roundtable attempted to effect a dramatic shift away from the purpose of the corporation being defined by the single metric of shareholder wealth maximization.  It released what it called a “new Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation signed by 181 CEOs who commit to lead their companies for the benefit of all stakeholders – customers, employees, suppliers, communities and shareholders.”  This move was received with both applause and condemnation, each of which continue two years later. 

In light of this anniversary, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021, from 11:45 am -1:00 pm at The National Press Club in Washington, D.C., the Law & Economics Center at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School will host an event titled Business Roundtable v. Milton Friedman: Reflections on the Second Anniversary of “Redefining” the Purpose of the Corporation.  A balanced panel of corporate governance experts will evaluate the economic and legal arguments involved in the debate over the proper purpose of the corporation and reflect on the state of the debate two years after the Business Roundtable’s attempt to erase the Friedman doctrine and redefine corporate purpose. 

Those interested can register here.  Lunch will be provided.  The panelists are:  Lisa Fairfax (Presidential Professor and Co-Director, Institute for Law and Economics, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School), Donald J. Kochan (Professor of Law and Deputy Executive Director, Law & Economics Center, George Mason University Scalia Law School), Robert T. Miller (F. Arnold Daum Chair in Corporate Finance and Law, University of Iowa College of Law), and Roberto Tallarita (Lecturer on Law, and Associate Director of the Program on Corporate Governance, Harvard Law School).  The panel will be moderated by The Honorable David J. Porter, Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit; and, welcome remarks will be given by Ken Randall (Allison and Dorothy Rouse Dean and George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law).

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Photo of Joan Heminway Joan Heminway

Professor Heminway brought nearly 15 years of corporate practice experience to the University of Tennessee College of Law when she joined the faculty in 2000. She practiced transactional business law (working in the areas of public offerings, private placements, mergers, acquisitions, dispositions, and…

Professor Heminway brought nearly 15 years of corporate practice experience to the University of Tennessee College of Law when she joined the faculty in 2000. She practiced transactional business law (working in the areas of public offerings, private placements, mergers, acquisitions, dispositions, and restructurings) in the Boston office of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP from 1985 through 2000.

She has served as an expert witness and consultant on business entity and finance and federal and state securities law matters and is a frequent academic and continuing legal education presenter on business law issues. Professor Heminway also has represented pro bono clients on political asylum applications, landlord/tenant appeals, social security/disability cases, and not-for-profit incorporations and related business law issues. Read More