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Corporations Are Not Free Market
Here are some brainstorming ideas. I'd be interested in knowing what you think. The purpose of this page is to have a discussion that prompts participants to think more clearly about exactly what is involved with a government's chartering of a corporation, providing limited liability to the corporation's shareholders (and, possibly, employees, directors, and officers, when acting on behalf of the corporation). I don't mean to say either that LimitedLiabilityIsaGoodThing? or that LimitedLiabilityIsaBadThing?, only that a government's charter of limited liability is entirely interventionist and the extreme opposite of a free market.
Contracts between individuals, without the government being involved, could be used to obtain three out of four features of corporations:
1. Freely transferable ownership interest;
2. Centralized management;
3. Continuity of existence.
The only thing a government can add is the fourth characteristic of a corporation:
4. Limited liability.
Limited liability means
that the executive branch
orders the judicial branch
to not enter any judgement against corporate owners
beyond the extent of the capital owners risked.
As BuckminsterFuller pointed out, the corporate structure was developed to further the European AgeOfExploration? by allowing investors and ship owners to have their risk of loss limited to the capital they contributed to exploratory voyages; while the sailors, some of whom were conscripted against their will, had unlimited liability as they could lose their lives on the voyage. In effect,
a corporate charter is an insurance policy
issued by the executive branch:
in exchange for the premium
(corporate filing fees, taxes paid by corporations, legislative oversight,
and other alleged benefits to society as a whole),
the executive branch assumes all risk to society of the corporation's activities
when the cost of those activities exceeds the capital contributed by owners.
In a completely free market (as in TheMoonIsaHarshMistress),
courts would be decentralized and ad-hoc,
so it would be impossible for anyone to issue a grant of limited liability.
A world of CorporateGovernment is certainly NOT the Nth degree of a free market;
it is the Nth degree of a government
in which the executive has greatly limited the ability of the judiciary
to hold individual people responsible for actions they undertook
as a part of, or on behalf of, a group chartered by the state.
See also the TheoryOfSecondBest for why corporations and the free market and society don't mix.
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