BIBLIOTECA MANUEL BELGRANO - Facultad de Ciencias Económicas - UNC

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Corporate governance in transitional economies : insider control and the role of Banks / edited by Masahiko Aokin, Kim, Hyung-Ki Kim.

Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries EDI Development studiesDetalles de publicación: Washington, D.C. : World Bank. Economic Development Institute, 1995Descripción: xxiii, 467 p. : ilISBN:
  • 0821329901
Tema(s): Clasificación CDD:
  • 332.12
Contenidos:
Overview / Masahiko Aoki and Hyung-Ki Kim -- Pt. 1. Generic and comparative issues: theory and policy implications -- 1. Controlling insider control: issues of corporate governance in transition economies / Masahiko Aoki -- 2. Political economy issues of ownership transformation in Eastern Europe / Gerard Roland -- 3. Corporate governance in transition economies: the theory and its policy implications / Erik Berglof -- Pt. 2. Country studies in comparative perspectives -- 4. Corporate governance, banks, and fiscal reform in Russia / John M. Litwack -- 5. Enterprise governance and investment funds in Russian privatization / Noritaka Akamatsu -- 6. Evolution of commercial banking in Russia and the implications for corporate governance / Elena Belyanova and Ivan Rozinsky -- 7. Reforming corporate governance and finance in China / Yingyi Qian -- 8. Centralized decentralization: corporate governance in the german economic economic trasition / Ernst- Ludwig von Thadden -- Pt. 3. Relevance and lessons of the Japanese and German experiences -- Introductory note / Masahiko Aoki -- 9. Cleaning up the balance sheets: Japanese experience in the postwar reconstruction period / Takeo Hoshi -- 10. The privatization of ex-Zaibatsu Holding stocks and the emergence of Bank-Centered Corporate Groups in Japan / Hideaki Miyajima -- 11. Savings mobilization and investment financing during Japan's postwar economic recovery /Juro Teranishi -- 12. Shareholder voting and corporate governance: the german experience and a new approach / Theodor Baums and Philipp v. Randow -- Index.
Resumen: When socialist planned economies were first being transformed into market economies, a naive optimism ruled. The transition could be achieved, it was thought, by simply privatizing state-owned enterprises and by introducing the equity market as a means of corporate control. This textbook notion of the capitalist system disregarded issues of political economy, as well as the historical development of national institutions. Recommendations based on such beliefs have proved either unrealistic or simplistic: no single model is appropriate for every country. This volume presents the results of research on corporate governance in transitional economies from the new perspective of comparative institutional analysis. Under this approach, banks and other outside institutions can play an important role in providing corporate governance. In the traditional model, efficient governance is meant to enable stockholders to exercise corporate control. The volume discusses: 1) theoretical foundations of corporate governance structures; 2) comparative country experiences; and 3) the relevance of lessons from Germany and Japan. By comparing and evaluating various systems of governance, the authors seek to uncover the factors that support or impede effective corporate control, including historical and socioeconomic conditions and institutional environments. In designing corporate governance structures, economists should identify the specific conditions under which each model of corporate control (or combination of models) can work, the availability of these conditions in the transitional economies, and the most efficient way of achieving these conditions.
Existencias
Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Signatura topográfica URL Estado Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras
Libro Libro Biblioteca Manuel Belgrano 332.12 A 47874 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) Enlace al recurso Disponible 47874
Libro Libro Biblioteca Manuel Belgrano 332.12 A 47875 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) Enlace al recurso Disponible 47875

Incluye bibliografía.

Overview / Masahiko Aoki and Hyung-Ki Kim -- Pt. 1. Generic and comparative issues: theory and policy implications -- 1. Controlling insider control: issues of corporate governance in transition economies / Masahiko Aoki -- 2. Political economy issues of ownership transformation in Eastern Europe / Gerard Roland -- 3. Corporate governance in transition economies: the theory and its policy implications / Erik Berglof -- Pt. 2. Country studies in comparative perspectives -- 4. Corporate governance, banks, and fiscal reform in Russia / John M. Litwack -- 5. Enterprise governance and investment funds in Russian privatization / Noritaka Akamatsu -- 6. Evolution of commercial banking in Russia and the implications for corporate governance / Elena Belyanova and Ivan Rozinsky -- 7. Reforming corporate governance and finance in China / Yingyi Qian -- 8. Centralized decentralization: corporate governance in the german economic economic trasition / Ernst- Ludwig von Thadden -- Pt. 3. Relevance and lessons of the Japanese and German experiences -- Introductory note / Masahiko Aoki -- 9. Cleaning up the balance sheets: Japanese experience in the postwar reconstruction period / Takeo Hoshi -- 10. The privatization of ex-Zaibatsu Holding stocks and the emergence of Bank-Centered Corporate Groups in Japan / Hideaki Miyajima -- 11. Savings mobilization and investment financing during Japan's postwar economic recovery /Juro Teranishi -- 12. Shareholder voting and corporate governance: the german experience and a new approach / Theodor Baums and Philipp v. Randow -- Index.

When socialist planned economies were first being transformed into market economies, a naive optimism ruled. The transition could be achieved, it was thought, by simply privatizing state-owned enterprises and by introducing the equity market as a means of corporate control. This textbook notion of the capitalist system disregarded issues of political economy, as well as the historical development of national institutions. Recommendations based on such beliefs have proved either unrealistic or simplistic: no single model is appropriate for every country. This volume presents the results of research on corporate governance in transitional economies from the new perspective of comparative institutional analysis. Under this approach, banks and other outside institutions can play an important role in providing corporate governance. In the traditional model, efficient governance is meant to enable stockholders to exercise corporate control. The volume discusses: 1) theoretical foundations of corporate governance structures; 2) comparative country experiences; and 3) the relevance of lessons from Germany and Japan. By comparing and evaluating various systems of governance, the authors seek to uncover the factors that support or impede effective corporate control, including historical and socioeconomic conditions and institutional environments. In designing corporate governance structures, economists should identify the specific conditions under which each model of corporate control (or combination of models) can work, the availability of these conditions in the transitional economies, and the most efficient way of achieving these conditions.

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