Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
publishedVersion
Publication Date
5-2020
Abstract
Since the UK adopted the world's first stewardship code in 2010, stewardship codes have proliferated across Asia. Given the UK Code's prominence, it is tempting to assume that every other stewardship code performs the same function as the UK Code. This assumption belies the truth: all these codes--regardless of whether they have in fact drawn inspiration from the UK Code--have taken different trajectories due to each adopting its jurisdiction's distinctive institutional and legal context.Using empirical evidence and in-depth case studies of stewardship in Japan and Singapore, this Article reveals how any reception of United Kingdom-style stewardship concepts is only skin deep. Even where the text of stewardship codes in Asia resemble the UK Code in form, their functional impact on corporate governance significantly departs from, or even runs counter to, the intended functions of the UK Code. This Article illustrates how stewardship codes in Asia have been used as a convenient vehicle for local governments and/or market players to achieve their own particular interests through an inexpensive, nonbinding, and malleable vehicle, the formal adoption of which sends a signal of "good corporate governance" to the rest of the world. While such practices explain and contextualize the widespread adoption of stewardship codes in Asia, they also compound the challenge of drawing positive or normative conclusions from this development. The observation advanced in this Article is important as leading corporate governance scholars, prominent international organizations, and market participants, have appeared content to draw such conclusions, unaware that stewardship codes generally do not fulfill a similar function to the UK Code in Asia.This Article concludes by explaining how adopting globally recognized mechanisms of "good corporate governance" at a superficial formal level, and then altering their function to serve local purposes, appears to be a rising trend in corporate governance in Asia (and elsewhere). This phenomenon, which we coin "faux convergence," calls for the reexamination of important and impactful theories about corporate governance convergence. As an initial foray, this Article develops an expanded taxonomy of corporate governance convergence and lays the foundation for future research on "faux convergence."
Keywords
commercial law, international trade alaw
Discipline
Asian Studies | Comparative and Foreign Law | International Trade Law
Publication
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Volume
53
Issue
3
First Page
829
Last Page
880
ISSN
0090-2594
Identifier
10.2139/ssrn.3481543
Publisher
Vanderbilt University Law School; 1999
Citation
GOTO, Gen; KOH, Alan K.; and PUCHNIAK, Dan W..
Diversity of shareholder stewardship in Asia: Faux convergence. (2020). Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law. 53, (3), 829-880.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/4000
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/vjtl/vol53/iss3/3/
Included in
Asian Studies Commons, Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, International Trade Law Commons