We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Citizens United, Independent Expenditures, and Agency Costs: Reexamining the Political Economy of State Antitakeover Statutes.
- Authors
Werner, Timothy; Coleman, John J.
- Abstract
We test the agency theory of corporate political activity by examining the association between the legality of independent expenditures and antitakeover lawmaking in the US states. Exploiting changes in state law regarding the use of corporate independent expenditures in the pre-Citizens United era, we estimate that a state is more likely to pass antitakeover statutes that entrench management when firms are allowed to make independent expenditures. We also find that this relationship is conditional on the competitiveness of a state's electoral environment, suggesting that the threat of independent expenditures may move vulnerable legislators' votes on less salient issues, such as corporate governance. These findings are robust to competing public interest and political economy explanations for antitakeover lawmaking, and they reveal that allowing independent expenditures may create additional agency costs for owners through public policy. Finally, these results strongly challenge the claim that state-level antitakeover laws are exogenous to firms' activities.
- Subjects
UNITED States; CORPORATE political activity; ANTITAKEOVER strategies; CITIZENS United v. Federal Election Commission; INDEPENDENT expenditure political action committees; CORPORATE governance; GOVERNMENT policy; AGENCY costs; LAW
- Publication
Journal of Law, Economics & Organization, 2015, Vol 31, Issue 1, p127
- ISSN
8756-6222
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/jleo/ewu009