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Does the Evidence Favor State Competition in Corporate Law?
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Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen, and Allen Ferrell
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In the ongoing debate on state competition over corporate charters,
supporters of state competition have long claimed that the empirical
evidence clearly supports their view. This Article suggests that
the body of empirical evidence on which supporters of state competition
have relied does not warrant this claim. This empirical evidence,
the authors show, is in fact entirely consistent with the opposing
view that state competition provides undesirable incentives with
respect to some corporate issues, such as takeover regulation,
that substantially affect corporate managers' private interests.
The authors first demonstrate that reported findings of a positive
correlation between incorporation in Delaware and increased shareholder
wealth are not robust and, furthermore, do not establish causation.
Second, the authors show that, even if Delaware incorporation
were found to cause an increase in shareholder value, this finding
would not imply that state competition is working well; benefits
to incorporating in the domi-nant state would likely exist in
a "race toward the bottom" equilibrium in which state
competition provided undesirable incentives. Third, the authors
point out that empirical claims that state competition rewards
moderation in the provision of antitakeover protections are not
well grounded. Finally, the authors endorse a new approach to
the empirical study of the subject that is based on analyzing
the determinants of companies' choices of state of incorporation.
Recent work based on this approach indicates that, contrary to
the beliefs of state-competition supporters, states that amass
antitakeover statutes are more successful in the incorporation
market. The authors' analysis calls for a reconsideration of established
posi-tions concerning the merits and consequences of regulatory
competition (as currently structured) in corporate law.
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© [year] by California Law Review, Inc.
California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California
nonprofit corporation.
CLR and the authors are solely responsible for
the content of their publications.
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