UK Police Officer Had an Odd Exchange with a Jewish Bystander During Pro-Hamas...
Does Biden Have Any Influence on the World Stage? Don't Ask Karine Jean-Pierre.
Police Provide Update on Man Who Lit Himself on Fire Outside Trump Trial
'Low-Grade Propaganda': Bill Introduced to Defund Liberal NPR
Colbert Takes His Democratic Party Road Show to the Convention, and Jesse Watters...
The Power of Forgiveness
Illegal Immigrants Find Creative Ways to Cross Over the Border In Arizona
MSNBC Claims Russia, Saudi Arabia Is Plotting to Help Trump Get Elected
State Department Employees Pushed for Israel to be Punished in Private Meetings
New Report Confirms Trump Won't Receive a Fair Trial
Karine Jean-Pierre References Charlottesville When Confronted About Pro-Hamas Chants
Biden's Title IX Rewrite Is Here
It's Been Almost a Week Since Iran Attacked Israel, Yet These Democrats Stayed...
Following England’s Lead, Another Country Will Stop Prescribing Puberty Blockers
The Five Stone Strategy of Defeating the Islamic Regime in Iran
OPINION

Elizabeth Warren’s Accountable Capitalism Act: No Sale

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

The Left may have shifted their main focus from class to race, but they haven’t forgotten about their original mission of taming capitalism. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., certainly hasn’t. On August 15, Senator Warren introduced a bill, the Accountable Capitalism Act, to rein in companies that are “making the rich even richer.” Among its features, the measure would make corporations with annual revenues of at least $1 billion to obtain a federal charter and mandate that at least 40 percent of their board members be chosen by employees. Warren assures skeptics that she believes in markets. Yet even if such a profession is genuine, her proposal is a recipe for undermining them.   

Advertisement

Not that long ago, Elizabeth Warren, now 69, taught contracts and bankruptcies at Harvard Law School. The author or co-author of nearly a dozen books, Warren evolved into a Real Fighter, an advocate for beleaguered families everywhere. Unable to win the coveted job of director of the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, she ran for U.S. senator from Massachusetts in 2012 against incumbent Republican Scott Brown – and won. A vocal and persistent critic of corporations, her economic platform is barely distinguishable from that of radical Senate colleague Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. Her main concern these days is that large publicly-traded firms are fixated on raising value for shareholders to the detriment of just about everyone else. 

In a guest article for the Wall Street Journal timed for the introduction of the Accountable Capitalism Act, Senator Warren explained her view. “Building on work by conservative economist Milton Friedman, a new theory emerged [in the 20th century] that corporate directors had only one obligation: to maximize shareholder returns,” she wrote. “The obsession with maximizing shareholder returns effectively means that America’s biggest companies have dedicated themselves to making the rich even richer.” Between 2007 and 2016, she stated, large American companies dedicated 93 percent of their earnings to shareholders, causing wages and salaries to stagnate across the board. “For the past 30 years we have put the American stamp of approval on giant corporations, even as they have ignored the interests of all but a tiny slice of Americans,” she concluded. “We should insist on a new deal.” What lays ahead looks more like a raw deal. 

Advertisement

The Accountable Capitalism Act, at bottom, is a program for wealth redistribution. Sen. Warren believes that too much money is going into the pockets of people who don’t need it. As evidence, she ruefully notes that 10 percent of U.S. households own 84 percent of the nation’s stock equity and, to make matters worse, that companies often buy back shares instead of reinvesting them. This misallocation of wealth, she argues, has diminished available funds for employee compensation. As a result, tens of millions of Americans live on the edge of bankruptcy or are already there. 

Senator Warren’s measure would rectify this ostensible injustice in several ways:

  • Force “very large” corporations – those with annual revenues of more than $1 billion – to obtain a charter from a new agency within the Commerce Department, the Office of United States Corporations. This charter would require board members to consider the interests of all company “stakeholders,” including communities in which the firm operates.
  • Authorize employees of such corporations to elect at least 40 percent of all board members. 
  • Prevent directors and officers of very large corporations to sell shares within five years of receiving them or three years of a buyback.
  • Prohibit corporations from engaging in political spending without the approval of at least 75 percent of directors and shareholders. 
Advertisement
  • Authorize the federal government to revoke the charter of any corporation engaging in repeated and egregious illegal conduct.

This legislation amounts to a revolution in corporate governance that Senator Warren somehow believes is way overdue. By weaning corporations away from their stock price fetish, they can better fulfill their social responsibilities. Her proposal has its champions. Blogger Matthew Iglesias, writing in Vox, happily proclaimed that the Accountable Capitalism Act “would redistribute trillions of dollars from rich executives and shareholders to the middle class – without costing a dime.”

Don’t believe the hype. These sorts of supporters, to say nothing of Senator Warren herself, are living in a fantasy world. The Accountable Capitalism Act will impose heavy costs on our economy, even if not obvious to the naked eye. Here are some considerations these errant knights of the populist Left are overlooking.

By treating bigness as an offense, the measure would discourage capital formation. All corporations, even “giant” ones, begin tiny. By subjecting the largest ones to intrusive regulation, the proposed legislation would discourage the fastest-growing (i.e., successful) companies from becoming industry leaders. Innovation and productivity throughout their respective industries would be held back.   

Large corporations pay employees better. It is intuitive that successful companies want to keep their employees happy. And a good way to do that is paying them well. Larger companies are in a better position to do this. According to Robert D. Atkinson and Michael Lind in their new book, Big Is Beautiful: Debunking the Myth of Small Business (MIT Press), large firms pay employees 54 percent more than small firms paid their equivalent employees. Moreover, they offered 2.5 times more paid leave and health insurance benefits, and 3.9 times more retirement benefits. To corral major corporations in effect is to corral their employees, whether or not they are shareholders.

Advertisement

The legislation would depress stock prices. Corporations offer equity shares to the public for a reason: It is an efficient, low-cost way of raising capital for growth. Discouraging this by definition would depress stock prices. Even Vox’s Matthew Iglesias admits prices could fall by as much as 25 percent, though he assures us that the decline would be offset by higher pay and more rights at work. Yes, equity has an unequal distribution. But that in itself does not cause poverty.  

Putting veto power over corporate decisions in the hands of “stakeholders” blurs the lines of responsibility. Senator Warren believes that by giving employees, customers, shareholders and whole communities this power, corporations would be more accountable. But accountable to whom? Experience should have taught us by now that with more potentially aggrieved parties involved in company decisions bring delays, lawsuits and bad publicity. Confusion over fiduciary responsibility inevitably would require constant resolution by the proposed Office of United States Corporations. As business ethicist Kenneth Goodpaster argues, the idea of “corporate social responsibility” amounts to “the conversion of the modern corporation into a public institution.”

Senator Warren’s bill is an invitation to corruption. By dramatically expanding the potential sources of corporate governance, the proposal would create rules whose ambiguity would discourage compliance. “Those rules will not be clean, explicit or simple,” cautions Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron. “They’ll be messy, they’ll be complicated.” Warren’s proposal will create a “huge ability for companies to evade and avoid.” 

Advertisement

Elizabeth Warren knows she has a tough sell. Even many congressional Democrats might balk. Thus, she’s been trying to deflect accusations that she is anti-business. “I believe in markets right down to my toes,” she said in an interview on MSNBC on July 19. “But I also believe markets have to have rules. Otherwise rich and powerful just keep sucking up all the value and everybody else ends up eating dirt.” This is a straw man. Nobody denies the need for marketplace rules or the fact that we already have them. Unfortunately, the rules proposed by Senator Warren amount to a half-baked venture in populist saber-rattling. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos