Report
Patrick Artus

Are shareholder-friendly settings also consumer-friendly?

OECD countries have organised their economies to benefit shareholders: reduction in labour costs via reduced bargaining power for wage earners, increase in corporate profit margins as companies have acquired dominant positions and monopoly rents, offshoring to emerging countries with low labour costs, tax competition regarding the taxation of earnings. All these factors are negative for wage earners and positive for shareholders. But the fall in labour costs and the offshoring are positive for consumers also: the only point of conflict between shareholders and consumers is competition: competition authorities’ tolerance of dominant positions is obviously negative for consumers. If OECD countries switched their strategy from promoting the interests of consumers to those of wage earners, the sources of conflict with shareholders would become much more numerous .
Provider
Natixis
Natixis

Based across the world’s leading financial centers, Natixis CIB Research offers an integrated view of the markets. The team provides support to inform Natixis clients’ investment and hedging decisions across all asset classes.

 

Analysts
Patrick Artus

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Benito Berber
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