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Corporate Irresponsibility Americas Newest Export First Printing Lawrence E Mitchell

  • SKU: BELL-1682574
Corporate Irresponsibility Americas Newest Export First Printing Lawrence E Mitchell
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Corporate Irresponsibility Americas Newest Export First Printing Lawrence E Mitchell instant download after payment.

Publisher: Yale University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 13.43 MB
Pages: 320
Author: Lawrence E. Mitchell
ISBN: 9780300090239, 9780300137767, 0300090234, 0300137761
Language: English
Year: 2001
Edition: First Printing

Product desciption

Corporate Irresponsibility Americas Newest Export First Printing Lawrence E Mitchell by Lawrence E. Mitchell 9780300090239, 9780300137767, 0300090234, 0300137761 instant download after payment.

Corporations are often so focused on making short-term profits for their stockholders that they behave in ways that adversely affect their employees, the environment, consumers, American politics, and even the long-term well-being of the corporation, says Lawrence Mitchell in this provocative book. This is a significant issue not only in the United States but also in the world, for many countries are beginning to emulate the American model of corporate governance. Mitchell criticises this emphasis on profit maximisation and the corporate legal structure that encourages it, and he offers concrete proposals to bring about more socially responsible corporate behavior. Mitchell declares that managers should be freed from the legal and structural constraints that make it difficult for them to exercise ordinary moral judgment and be held accountable for their actions. He suggests, for example, that earnings reports be required annually rather than quarterly, that the capital gains tax be increased on stocks held for fewer than thirty days, and that elections of corporate boards of directors be held every five years rather than every year. Mitchell places the problem of corporate irresponsibility within the broader context of American life and demonstrates the extent to which contemporary corporate behaviour represents a corruption of our cherished liberal values of personal freedom and individuality.

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