2020
DOI: 10.1177/1024529420934641
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Financialization at work: Shareholder primacy and stagnant wages in the United States

Abstract: Financialization has been ‘at work’ in the United States for nearly half of a century, as corporate executives have increasingly prioritized shareholder payments over other productive uses of corporate resources. Over the same period, employee bargaining power has fallen and wages for non-executive workers have stagnated across sectors. This article examines the effects of shareholder primacy on labour compensation in the United States in the neoliberal era at the aggregate, sectoral and firm level. Specifical… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…It shows, first, that the vast majority of corporate investment is financed from internal funds, that is, retained profits. Second, while the stock market had not been a source of net financing for the corporate sector since 1970, its contribution turned negative in the 1980s, meaning the stock market has helped ferret capital out of the corporate sector (Henwood, 1997;Mason, 2015), at the expense of workers and investment (L. E. Davis, 2018;Palladino, 2020). Third, and most remarkably, even traditional loans have made a negative contribution since 1990.…”
Section: Macroeconomic Perspectives On Financial Capital Abundancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It shows, first, that the vast majority of corporate investment is financed from internal funds, that is, retained profits. Second, while the stock market had not been a source of net financing for the corporate sector since 1970, its contribution turned negative in the 1980s, meaning the stock market has helped ferret capital out of the corporate sector (Henwood, 1997;Mason, 2015), at the expense of workers and investment (L. E. Davis, 2018;Palladino, 2020). Third, and most remarkably, even traditional loans have made a negative contribution since 1990.…”
Section: Macroeconomic Perspectives On Financial Capital Abundancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evidence for the rise of shareholder payments can be found in the rise of shareholder payments in the form of stock buybacks, which totaled $6.3 trillion from 2010 to 2019 (Palladino and Lala 2020). A specific strand of the literature has focused on the relationship between rising financialization and the falling labor share, showing a negative relationship between both rising financial receipts and rising financial payments and labor in the United States and Europe (Barradas 2019; Lin and Tomaskovic-Devey 2013; Lin 2016; Palladino 2020; Fligstein and Shin 2007; Cushen and Thompson 2016). In contrast, as shareholder primacy tied the remuneration of corporate executives to share prices, pay for corporate elites skyrocketed; the pressure coming from institutional shareholders to maximize shareholder value aligned with managers’ own self-interests (Hopkins and Lazonick 2016; Lazonick and Shin 2020).…”
Section: The Flawed Theory Of Shareholder Primacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The underlying error here in both cases is the assumption that corporate governance operates efficiently, so that, among other outcomes, any current structure already reflects worker preferences, rather than power imbalances and information asymmetries between workers and shareholders, as well as the power of the shareholder class to set corporate law (Ireland 2010). Today, it is shareholders who are currently "eating up" the productive uses of the firm in the United States, for example through the use of excessive stock buybacks, which raise share prices that benefit short term share-sellers and corporate executives at the expense of productive investment in future firm productivity (Lazonick 2014;Palladino 2020a). 7…”
Section: Objections To Worker Representation On Corporate Boardsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Shareholder primacy contributes to widening economic inequality, as labor's share of income has stagnated while shareholder payments (increasingly in the form of stock buybacks) drive up the incomes of the wealthiest households (Barradas 2019;Lazonick 2014;Lin 2016;Lin and Tomaskovic-Devey 2013;Palladino 2020a;Piketty 2020). The focus on increasing share prices has been widely recognized as one of the factors driving the squeezing of labor costs, as activist investors threaten to discipline management when shareholder returns are not their sole focus (Crotty 2003;Davis 2009;Wartzman 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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