Shareholder or Stakeholder Model of Corporate Governance: which one Should Ethiopia Choose?
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Date
2016-03
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Addis Ababa University
Abstract
In whose interests should a corporation be run? Should corporate governance focus on protecting
the interests of only shareholders or should it expand its focus and consider the interests of other
stakeholder groups? For decades, debate has been made on this question among scholars of
corporate governance. Corporate governance literature commonly divides the world into two
spheres: the Anglo-American “outsider” system and the continental Europe or German-Japanese
“insider” system, each with a characteristic set of structural elements, ownership patterns, and
strengths and weaknesses. The traditional “Shareholder Model”, which predominantly exists in
Anglo-America countries, argues that a firm should primarily focus on shareholders’ wealth
maximization. On the other side, the “Stakeholder Model”, which exists in German, Japan and
other Continental Europe, contends that a firm has other purpose in a society than maximization
of shareholders wealth so that it should focus not only on the interests of shareholders but also on
employees, customers, suppliers, local communities and other stakeholders. The purpose of this
research paper is to introduce each model and the theoretical debate that exists between them
with a final recommendation of the appropriate model for Ethiopia. It tries to evaluate both
models generally and in light of Ethiopia’s corporate governance environment. The paper
recommends that Ethiopia should follow an eclectic approach in choosing between the two
models which can be represented by the “Enlightened Shareholder Value” approach.