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
- 1 The European Model Company Act Project
- 2 The Societas Privata Europaea: a basic reform of EU law on business organizations
- 3 Ius Audacibus. The future of EU company law
- 4 Free movement of capital and protectionism after Volkswagen and Viking Line
- 5 Centros and the cost of branching
- 6 Towards the end of the real seat theory in Europe?
- 7 The Commission Recommendations of 14 December 2004 and of 15 February 2005 and their implementation in Germany
- 8 The Nordic corporate governance model – a European model?
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 2: Corporate governance, shareholders' rights and auditing
- 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
- References
8 - The Nordic corporate governance model – a European model?
from PART I - Perspectives in company law, SECTION 1: European company law: regulatory competition and free movement of companies
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
- 1 The European Model Company Act Project
- 2 The Societas Privata Europaea: a basic reform of EU law on business organizations
- 3 Ius Audacibus. The future of EU company law
- 4 Free movement of capital and protectionism after Volkswagen and Viking Line
- 5 Centros and the cost of branching
- 6 Towards the end of the real seat theory in Europe?
- 7 The Commission Recommendations of 14 December 2004 and of 15 February 2005 and their implementation in Germany
- 8 The Nordic corporate governance model – a European model?
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 2: Corporate governance, shareholders' rights and auditing
- 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
- References
Summary
A need for further harmonization?
Depending on your temper, there may be something slightly saddening about looking at the European directives on company law; a feeling that a great momentum has ground to a halt. Then again, you may feel relief.
In the beginning harmonization appeared to be as easy as one, two, three: the First Company Law Directive on publicity and company formation, the Second Company Law Directive on capital and the Third Company Law Directive on mergers. But there soon came the first major stumble, when the proposal for a Fifth Company Law Directive on corporate governance was first brought to a halt, then forgotten and finally abandoned. Although new directives would continue to be adopted with the Sixth Company Law Directive on the division of companies, this was not quite the same, as this Directive was optional in its entirety. Later, a proposal for a Ninth Company Law Directive on corporate groups was never even adopted by the Commission, which left a gap between the Eighth Company Law Directive on auditing and the Eleventh Company Law Directive on branches, a gap that was widened by the stalling of the proposal for a Tenth Company Law Directive on cross-border mergers. And when that Directive was eventually passed – due, as is so often the case, to the gentle but firm assistance of the European Court of Justice – it no longer carried a number in its title, leaving a permanent gap in the numbering.
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- Information
- Perspectives in Company Law and Financial Regulation , pp. 145 - 162Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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