The Social Trajectory of a Finance Professor and the Common Sense of Capital
Marion Fourcade and
Rakesh Khurana
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Marion Fourcade: UC Berkeley - University of California [Berkeley] - UC - University of California
Rakesh Khurana: Harvard Business School - Harvard University
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Abstract:
This paper traces the career of Michael Jensen, a Chicago finance PhD turned Harvard Business School professor to reveal the intellectual and social conditions that enabled the emergence and institutionalization of what we call the "neoliberal common sense of capital," what others have called the "shareholder value" view of the American firm. Jensen's work was embraced by a generation of corporate raiders aggressively advancing new financial practices and discourses. His contribution, commonly understood as "agency theory," was intertwined with the transformations in corporate management and governance of the last decades of the twentieth century—from the junk bond market in the 1980s to the exponential growth of CEO pay in the 1990s to the shareholder value management strategies of the 2000s. While debates about the spread of neoliberal ideas and governance tools have largely centered on the transformations of the state and international institutions or the role of actively organized intellectual networks, this essay emphasizes the importance of identifying specific carriers of particular transformations within the space of American "business discourse."
Keywords: Agency theory; Corporate governance; Executive pay; The firm; Michael Jensen; Neoliberalism; Shareholder value (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017-06
Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://sciencespo.hal.science/hal-03458689v1
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)
Published in History of Political Economy, 2017, 49 (2), pp.347 - 381. ⟨10.1215/00182702-3876505⟩
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hal:journl:hal-03458689
DOI: 10.1215/00182702-3876505
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