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Investigating New Types of 'Decoupling': Minority Shareholder Protection in the Law & Corporate Practice

Gerhard Schnyder and Centre for Business Research

Working Papers from Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge

Abstract: The study of decoupling – i.e. the discrepancies between formal policies and actual practices and outcomes – has seen a remarkable revival. Importantly, a distinction between policy-practice and means-ends decoupling has become widely-used. We argue that the decoupling literature still neglects a key feature of decoupling, namely that it is inherently a multi-level concept. Distinguishing explicitly the macro- (country) and the micro- (organisation) levels, we develop a more fine-grained typology of policy–practice and means–ends decoupling. We hypothesise that differences in the macro-environment may influence the type and extent of decoupling that prevails in a given country. We test our hypotheses in the context of the adoption of legal minority shareholder protection in four European countries. We go beyond previous studies that have investigated policy–practice and means-end decoupling in the same context by using a unique dataset for firm-level corporate governance practices that allows us to investigate the multi-level nature of decoupling more directly. Our findings suggest that that decoupling is context specific and the extent to which policy-practice decoupling occurs may depend on a country's legal style.

Keywords: Decoupling; Corporate Governance; Minority Shareholder Protection (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: G34 G38 K22 O16 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2018-03
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-cfn and nep-law
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