[lbo-talk] Heidegger and uneasy questions

Charles Brown charlesb at cncl.ci.detroit.mi.us
Thu Jul 10 10:01:35 PDT 2008


martin

BTW - Does anyone discuss the web formed by the overlapping memberships in corporate boards of directors within global corporations ? In terms of that web forming an organic operating system that perpetuates is own continuation ?

^^^^^ CB: There's a term "interlocking directorates". but it would have to be extended internationally.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlocking_directorate

nterlocking directorate refers to the practice of members of corporate board of directors serving on the boards of multiple corporations. This practice, although widespread and lawful, raises questions about the quality and independence of board decisions.

The average board of directors has nine members, and the total population of board members of public companies traded on the NYSE, NASDAQ and AMEX stock exchanges is about 53,000. A USA Today analysis of corporate reports found a high degree of inter-relation:

of the 15 largest companies in the United States, 11 of them have two board members that sit together on another company's board four of those 15 share at least two board members with another of the 15 more than 1000 board members sit on four boards or more; 235 board members sit on more than six boards major banks are at the center of many of the overlapping ties Watchdogs point out that interlocking directorates may cause conflicts of interest, poor governance and poor compensation decisions, a lack of fresh perspective, and the concentration of corporate power into a single extended social network. CEO interlocks are seen as a particular concern for potential conflicts of interest. Proving direct harm to stockholders is difficult, though, because there is no clear definition of how much overlap is acceptable, and in any case board members are selected by stockholders' votes.

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