What are the Costs of Weakening Shareholder Primacy? Evidence from a U.S. Quasi-Natural Experiment
Working Paper 33828
DOI 10.3386/w33828
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We study the economic consequences of weakening shareholder primacy using Nevada Senate Bill 203 as a quasi-natural experiment. A difference-in-differences analysis shows that affected Nevada firms experienced a decline in firm value of more than 4%, as measured by Tobin’s q. Rather than responding with stronger governance to reassure capital providers, affected firms worsen their governance. We document significant real effects through the investment channel: treated firms undertake worse acquisitions and exhibit reduced efficiency in both capital expenditures and R&D spending. Furthermore, weakening shareholder primacy does not improve how stakeholders are treated, as environmental and social performance worsen.
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Copy CitationBenjamin Bennett, René M. Stulz, and Zexi Wang, "What are the Costs of Weakening Shareholder Primacy? Evidence from a U.S. Quasi-Natural Experiment," NBER Working Paper 33828 (2025), https://doi.org/10.3386/w33828.Download Citation
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