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Managers And Market Capitalism

Date : 26/06/2013

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Dan

Uploaded by : Dan
Uploaded on : 26/06/2013
Subject : Economics

In whose interests should managers act, particularly when structuring market regulations in highly technical or specialized matters that are largely outside public purview? This paper raises questions about the role of managers in sustaining the conditions for market capitalism to achieve its normative objectives. Rebecca Henderson and Karthik Ramanna begin with a discussion of the normative arguments for fully competitive markets as a resource allocation mechanism in complex societies. They suggest that Milton Friedman`s assertion that the business of business is to increase its profits was in fact a moral assertion rooted in this normative framework. Next, they discuss the conditions for the existence of competitive markets and offer a brief overview of the institutions that provide them, noting that a combination of for-profit, pure public, and public-private institutions are needed to sustain capitalism. This perspective has two implications for managers. First, in many cases the opportunity to provide market completing institutions is a significant profit opportunity. Second, in those cases in which the provision of an institution is a scarcely attended political process or a public good that cannot be easily realized by managers, managers may have a duty to mitigate this market incompleteness even if it is not immediately profit maximizing to do so. Ultimately, managers` actions are likely to shape the moral and political legitimacy of market capitalism. Key concepts include:

Managers may have a responsibility to structure market institutions so as to preserve the legitimacy of market capitalism, even if doing so is at the expense of corporate profits. Both conceptually and empirically, it is difficult to specify where legal self-serving lobbying ends and overt corruption of regulation begins. Even in those cases in which self-interested lobbying is clearly legal, it may not be consistent with the ethical objectives of capitalism. Distorting market rules, whether through legal lobbying or through overt corruption, distorts market outcomes and erodes political and social support for market capitalism. Finding a way to reconcile economic models of the role of the corporation and of business activity with the reality of events such as the financial crisis and the prevalence of "crony capitalism" and corporate corruption is one of the most important challenges of our time.

This resource was uploaded by: Dan