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Corporate governance and corporate political activity

Corporate governance and corporate political activity

what effect will citizens united have on shareholder wealth

By John C. Coates

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Publish Date

2010

Publisher

Harvard Law School

Language

eng

Pages

-

Description:

"Abstract: In Citizens United, the Supreme Court relaxed the ability of corporations to spend money on elections, rejecting a shareholder-protection rationale for restrictions on spending. Little research has focused on the relationship between corporate governance -- shareholder rights and power -- and corporate political activity. This paper explores that relationship in the S&P 500 to predict the effect of Citizens United on shareholder wealth. The paper finds that in the period 1998-2004 shareholder-friendly governance was consistently and strongly negatively related to observable political activity before and after controlling for established correlates of that activity, even in a firm fixed effects model. Political activity, in turn, is strongly negatively correlated with firm value. These findings -- together with the likelihood that unobservable political activity is even more harmful to shareholder interests -- imply that laws that replace the shareholder protections removed by Citizens United would be valuable to shareholders"--John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business web site.