Mark J. Roe
- Published in print:
- 2022
- Published Online:
- March 2022
- ISBN:
- 9780197625620
- eISBN:
- 9780197625651
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
- DOI:
- 10.1093/oso/9780197625620.003.0002
- Subject:
- Business and Management, Corporate Governance and Accountability
Chapter 1 presents the wide public, political, and media attack on stock market short-termism. It outlines the channels through which stock market short-termism is seen as seriously damaging the ...
More
Chapter 1 presents the wide public, political, and media attack on stock market short-termism. It outlines the channels through which stock market short-termism is seen as seriously damaging the economy and hurting the average worker: slashed investment, cash-burning buybacks, R&D cutbacks, environmental degradation, global warming, and sidelined employees. It describes the views of senators, presidential candidates, and presidents on the issue.Less
Chapter 1 presents the wide public, political, and media attack on stock market short-termism. It outlines the channels through which stock market short-termism is seen as seriously damaging the economy and hurting the average worker: slashed investment, cash-burning buybacks, R&D cutbacks, environmental degradation, global warming, and sidelined employees. It describes the views of senators, presidential candidates, and presidents on the issue.
Mark J. Roe
- Published in print:
- 2022
- Published Online:
- March 2022
- ISBN:
- 9780197625620
- eISBN:
- 9780197625651
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
- DOI:
- 10.1093/oso/9780197625620.003.0001
- Subject:
- Business and Management, Corporate Governance and Accountability
The Introduction begins by recounting the popular view that stock-market-driven short-termism severely damages the US economy. Firms forgo the R&D they need, cut capital spending, and starve ...
More
The Introduction begins by recounting the popular view that stock-market-driven short-termism severely damages the US economy. Firms forgo the R&D they need, cut capital spending, and starve themselves of cash by excessively buying back stock to satisfy Wall Street. Stock market pressure means directors and managers cannot manage for the long-term when their shareholders furiously trade their companies’ stocks, they cannot invest enough when stockholders demand rising quarterly profits, they must slash R&D when investors demand that precious cash be used to buy back stock, and they cannot even strategize about the long-term when shareholder activists demand immediate results. If that weren’t bad enough, the stock market’s short-termism is also blamed for environmental degradation, for contributing to global warming, and for employee mistreatment. Due to short-termism, corporations are less socially responsible, in a widely-held view. The Introduction exemplifies these perceptions with statements from national political leaders. However, the Introduction then states, the case for deeply pernicious results from stock market short-termism is weaker on the evidence and on the logic of how markets work than the view popular among pundits and lawmakers. Those lawmakers and pundits who aim at stock-market-driven short-termism can readily miss more likely targets for attacking the ills often attributed to stock market short-termism. For example, stock market short-termism is said to severely damage corporate R&D spending and thereby hold the economy back. But a look at the numbers points to other causes and more propitious targets for improving American R&D. And the environmental, climate, and social responsibility failures emanate from selfishness—externalities in the technical vocabulary—more than from truncated time horizons. The Introduction closes with suggestions that the prominent perception of pernicious short-termism is explained largely by political and social currents: first, targeted interests benefit when stock markets are blamed and, second, a wide but diffuse public dissatisfaction with economic arrangements overall, including discomfort with increasing uncertainty and instability in the workplace, and a generalized disorientation from the rapidity of technological change, which often looks like short-termism but is not.Less
The Introduction begins by recounting the popular view that stock-market-driven short-termism severely damages the US economy. Firms forgo the R&D they need, cut capital spending, and starve themselves of cash by excessively buying back stock to satisfy Wall Street. Stock market pressure means directors and managers cannot manage for the long-term when their shareholders furiously trade their companies’ stocks, they cannot invest enough when stockholders demand rising quarterly profits, they must slash R&D when investors demand that precious cash be used to buy back stock, and they cannot even strategize about the long-term when shareholder activists demand immediate results. If that weren’t bad enough, the stock market’s short-termism is also blamed for environmental degradation, for contributing to global warming, and for employee mistreatment. Due to short-termism, corporations are less socially responsible, in a widely-held view. The Introduction exemplifies these perceptions with statements from national political leaders. However, the Introduction then states, the case for deeply pernicious results from stock market short-termism is weaker on the evidence and on the logic of how markets work than the view popular among pundits and lawmakers. Those lawmakers and pundits who aim at stock-market-driven short-termism can readily miss more likely targets for attacking the ills often attributed to stock market short-termism. For example, stock market short-termism is said to severely damage corporate R&D spending and thereby hold the economy back. But a look at the numbers points to other causes and more propitious targets for improving American R&D. And the environmental, climate, and social responsibility failures emanate from selfishness—externalities in the technical vocabulary—more than from truncated time horizons. The Introduction closes with suggestions that the prominent perception of pernicious short-termism is explained largely by political and social currents: first, targeted interests benefit when stock markets are blamed and, second, a wide but diffuse public dissatisfaction with economic arrangements overall, including discomfort with increasing uncertainty and instability in the workplace, and a generalized disorientation from the rapidity of technological change, which often looks like short-termism but is not.
Mark J. Roe
- Published in print:
- 2022
- Published Online:
- March 2022
- ISBN:
- 9780197625620
- eISBN:
- 9780197625651
- Item type:
- book
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
- DOI:
- 10.1093/oso/9780197625620.001.0001
- Subject:
- Business and Management, Corporate Governance and Accountability
Stock-market-driven short-termism is crippling the US economy, according to legal, judicial, and media thinking. Firms forgo the R&D they need, cut capital spending, and buy back their own stock so ...
More
Stock-market-driven short-termism is crippling the US economy, according to legal, judicial, and media thinking. Firms forgo the R&D they need, cut capital spending, and buy back their own stock so feverishly that they starve themselves of cash. The stock market is the primary cause: directors and managers cannot manage for the long-term when their shareholders furiously trade their companies’ stocks, they cannot invest enough when stockholders demand rising quarterly profits, they must slash R&D when investors demand that precious cash be used to buy back stock, and they cannot even strategize about the long-term when shareholder activists demand immediate results. The stock market’s short-termism is also blamed for environmental degradation, for contributing to global warming, and for employee mistreatment. This book shows, however, that the purported ills emanating from stock-market short-termism are either not shown, likely to minor, demonstrably false, or due to other pernicious economic causes. The social costs attributed to corporate short-termsim—environmental degradation, mistreatment of stakeholders, riaking climate catastrophe—emanate more from selfishness than from distorted time horizons, as we shall see. Moreover, public and policymaker obsession with stock-market short-termism as upsetting the economy and settled arrangements is explained more by dissatisfaction with the rapidity of technological change, the increasing uncertainty and instability of the workplace, and a dissatisfaction with overall economic arrangements. Lawmakers and pundits can readily miss more likely causes of the underlying issues—like how best to push forward US R&D—by mistakenly aiming at stock-market short-termism. After considering what the evidence tells us, we consider what political and social reasons could explain the issue’s prominence.Less
Stock-market-driven short-termism is crippling the US economy, according to legal, judicial, and media thinking. Firms forgo the R&D they need, cut capital spending, and buy back their own stock so feverishly that they starve themselves of cash. The stock market is the primary cause: directors and managers cannot manage for the long-term when their shareholders furiously trade their companies’ stocks, they cannot invest enough when stockholders demand rising quarterly profits, they must slash R&D when investors demand that precious cash be used to buy back stock, and they cannot even strategize about the long-term when shareholder activists demand immediate results. The stock market’s short-termism is also blamed for environmental degradation, for contributing to global warming, and for employee mistreatment. This book shows, however, that the purported ills emanating from stock-market short-termism are either not shown, likely to minor, demonstrably false, or due to other pernicious economic causes. The social costs attributed to corporate short-termsim—environmental degradation, mistreatment of stakeholders, riaking climate catastrophe—emanate more from selfishness than from distorted time horizons, as we shall see. Moreover, public and policymaker obsession with stock-market short-termism as upsetting the economy and settled arrangements is explained more by dissatisfaction with the rapidity of technological change, the increasing uncertainty and instability of the workplace, and a dissatisfaction with overall economic arrangements. Lawmakers and pundits can readily miss more likely causes of the underlying issues—like how best to push forward US R&D—by mistakenly aiming at stock-market short-termism. After considering what the evidence tells us, we consider what political and social reasons could explain the issue’s prominence.
Mark J. Roe
- Published in print:
- 2022
- Published Online:
- March 2022
- ISBN:
- 9780197625620
- eISBN:
- 9780197625651
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
- DOI:
- 10.1093/oso/9780197625620.003.0015
- Subject:
- Business and Management, Corporate Governance and Accountability
This conclusion recapitulates how and why the evidence does not support the popular and political understanding that stock market short-termism is severely damaging the economy. Some of the public ...
More
This conclusion recapitulates how and why the evidence does not support the popular and political understanding that stock market short-termism is severely damaging the economy. Some of the public impetus against stock market short-termism derives from unease over current economic arrangements. Some of it derives from a mistaken belief that short-termism is a major impetus degrading corporate purpose, corporate social responsibility, and corporate effort to head off climate catastrophe. And corporate interests can at times benefit from this popular understanding.Less
This conclusion recapitulates how and why the evidence does not support the popular and political understanding that stock market short-termism is severely damaging the economy. Some of the public impetus against stock market short-termism derives from unease over current economic arrangements. Some of it derives from a mistaken belief that short-termism is a major impetus degrading corporate purpose, corporate social responsibility, and corporate effort to head off climate catastrophe. And corporate interests can at times benefit from this popular understanding.