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A bitter adjustment for German family capitalism: Succession and a changing ownership transfer regime

Isabell Stamm and Allan Sandham

No 23/5, MPIfG Discussion Paper from Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies

Abstract: Germany is known for its family-owned businesses that transfer ownership across generations. However, business owners in Germany increasingly envision selling their business beyond the family, which fundamentally changes the institutionalized way private ownership of businesses is transferred. In this paper, we analyze and explain this fundamental change in German family capitalism since the 1990s. Drawing on a sociology of ownership, we view family succession as a transfer regime and show how this regime has been problematized and gradually reframed. Based on analysis of a rich corpus of documents, archival materials, and twenty-seven expert interviews, we show how a new transfer regime - the exit regime - emerges, which coordinates ownership transfer among founders through matchmaking. Our study contributes to research on family capitalism and succession by demonstrating how family capital moves toward the financial sector without becoming financial capital as it loses the family and gains the founder as personalized points of reference.

Keywords: capitalism; family; ownership; regime change; succession; Eigentum; Familie; Kapitalismus; Nachfolge; Regimewandel (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ent, nep-eur and nep-his
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