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agency conflict

Forums › ACCA Forums › ACCA SBL Strategic Business Leader Forums › agency conflict

  • This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 4 years ago by Spiro.
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  • January 29, 2021 at 6:01 am #608404
    ernest
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    • Topics: 2
    • Replies: 5
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    What is the possible agency conflict between inside owner/managers and outside shareholders?

    January 29, 2021 at 8:42 am #608416
    Spiro
    Participant
    • Topics: 11
    • Replies: 42
    • ☆☆

    Hi, I hope that these extracts from a SBL technical article could help you.

    Who’s who: the stakeholder/stockholder debate

    Essentially, proponents of the stockholder theory argue that because organisations are ‘owned’ by their principals, the agents (directors) have a moral and legal duty to only take account of principals’ claims when setting objectives and making decisions. Hence, for a joint stock business such as a public company, it may be assumed that because principals (shareholders) seek to maximise their returns, the sole duty of agents is to act in such a way as to achieve that.

    Stakeholder theorists, in contrast, argue that because a business organisation is a citizen of society, enjoying its protection, support and benefits, it has a duty to recognise a plurality of claims in the same way that an individual might act as a ‘responsible citizen’. In effect, this means recognising claims in addition to those of shareholders when reaching decisions and deciding on strategies.

    and this also:

    Pristine capitalists

    At the extreme stockholder end is the pristine capitalist position. The value underpinning this position is shareholder wealth maximisation, and implicit within it is the view that anything that reduces potential shareholder wealth is effectively theft from shareholders. Because shareholders have risked their own money to invest in a business, and it is they who are the legal owners, only they have any right to determine the objectives and strategies of the business. Agents (directors) that take actions, perhaps in the name of social responsibility, that may reduce the value of the return to shareholders, are acting without mandate and destroying value for shareholders.

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