Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- PART I Perspectives in company law, SECTION 1: European company law: regulatory competition and free movement of companies
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 2: Corporate governance, shareholders' rights and auditing
- 9 Stakeholders and the legal theory of the corporation
- 10 The renaissance of organized shareholder representation in Europe
- 11 In search of a middle ground between the perceived excesses of US-style class actions and the generally ineffective collective action procedures in Europe
- 12 Some modest proposals to provide viable damages remedies for French investors
- 13 Pre-clearance in European accounting law – the right step?
- 14 International standards on auditing and their adoption in the EU: legal aspects and unsettled questions
- 15 Corporate governance: directors' duties, financial reporting and liability – remarks from a German perspective
- 16 Some aspects of capital maintenance law in the UK
- 17 Luxembourg company law – a total overhaul
- 18 Role of corporate governance reform and enforcement in the Netherlands
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 3: Takeover law
- PART II Perspectives in financial regulation, SECTION 1: European perspectives
- PART 2 Perspectives in financial regulation, SECTION 2: Transatlantic perspectives
- PART III Miscellaneous
- Index
15 - Corporate governance: directors' duties, financial reporting and liability – remarks from a German perspective
from PART 1 - Perspectives in company law, SECTION 2: Corporate governance, shareholders' rights and auditing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- PART I Perspectives in company law, SECTION 1: European company law: regulatory competition and free movement of companies
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 2: Corporate governance, shareholders' rights and auditing
- 9 Stakeholders and the legal theory of the corporation
- 10 The renaissance of organized shareholder representation in Europe
- 11 In search of a middle ground between the perceived excesses of US-style class actions and the generally ineffective collective action procedures in Europe
- 12 Some modest proposals to provide viable damages remedies for French investors
- 13 Pre-clearance in European accounting law – the right step?
- 14 International standards on auditing and their adoption in the EU: legal aspects and unsettled questions
- 15 Corporate governance: directors' duties, financial reporting and liability – remarks from a German perspective
- 16 Some aspects of capital maintenance law in the UK
- 17 Luxembourg company law – a total overhaul
- 18 Role of corporate governance reform and enforcement in the Netherlands
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 3: Takeover law
- PART II Perspectives in financial regulation, SECTION 1: European perspectives
- PART 2 Perspectives in financial regulation, SECTION 2: Transatlantic perspectives
- PART III Miscellaneous
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The impossible is happening in Germany these days. The management board of Siemens, the jewel in the crown of the German economy, is preparing compensation claims against former management and supervisory board members of the company and thereby supplementing the criminal law investigations which the Munich public prosecutor has instigated against these former executives. That is very embarrassing for those involved! These events are shocking for two reasons: firstly, because management board or supervisory board members have so far hardly ever been made liable in Germany (The sarcastic comment of the former chairman of Deutsche Bank, Hermann Josef Abs comes to mind: ‘It is easier to catch a pig by its slippery tail than to make a supervisory board liable.’); and secondly, these proceedings involve Siemens, an icon of the German economy. The former chairman of the supervisory board Heinrich von Pierer was, up to a few days ago, chairman of the Innovation Council, which advises Federal Chancellor Merkel on research strategies of economic significance.
From the point of view of company law, we can here discern the effects of corporate governance and the way it has continued to work better in Germany. And the events at Siemens will certainly significantly increase the already wide acceptance of corporate governance and its mechanisms. In my view, there will soon be a breakthrough in Germany (including a psychological breakthrough) and the regulatory discipline of corporate governance will meet with general approval.
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- Information
- Perspectives in Company Law and Financial Regulation , pp. 264 - 275Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009