首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitions end in failure. Like many marriages, they are of
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitions end in failure. Like many marriages, they are of
admin
2016-07-09
25
问题
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitions end in failure. Like many marriages, they are often fraught with irreconcilable cultural and financial differences. Yet M&A activity was up sharply in 2013 and reached pre-recession levels this year. So why do companies keep at it? Because it’s an easy way to make a quick buck and please Wall Street. Increasingly, business is serving markets rather than markets serving business, as they were originally meant to do in our capitalist system.
For a particularly stark example, consider American pharmaceutical giant Pfizer’s recent bid to buy British drugmaker AstraZeneca. The deal made little strategic sense and would probably have destroyed thousands of jobs as well as slowed research at both companies.(Public outcry to that effect eventually helped scuttle the plan.)But it would have allowed Pfizer to shift its domicile to Britain, where companies pay less tax. That, in turn, would have boosted share prices in the short term, enriching the executives paid in stock and the bankers, lawyers and other financial intermediaries who stood to gain about half a billion dollars or so in fees from the deal.
Pfizer isn’t alone. Plenty of firms engage in such tax wizardry(巫术). This kind of short-term thinking is starting to dominate executive suites. Besides tax avoidance, Wall Street’s marching orders to corporate America include dividend payments and share buybacks, which sap long-term growth plans. It also demands ever more globalized supply chains, which make balance sheets look better by cutting costs but add complexity and risk. All of this hurts longer-term, more sustainable job and value creation. As a recent article on the topic by academic Gautam Mukunda in the Harvard Business Review noted, "The financial sector’s influence on management has become so powerful that a recent survey of chief financial officers showed that 78% would give up economic value and 55% would cancel a project with a positive net present value—that is, willingly harm their companies—to meet Wall Street’s targets and fulfill its desire for ’ smooth’ earnings. "
Some of this can be blamed on the sheer size of the financial sector. Many thought that the economic crisis and Great Recession would weaken the power of markets. In fact, it only strengthened finance’s grip on the economy. The largest banks are bigger than they were before the recession, while finance as a percentage of the economy is about the same size. Overall, the industry earns 30% of all corporate profit while creating just 6% of the country’s jobs. And financial institutions are still doing plenty of tricky things with our money. Legendary investor Warren Buffett recently told me he’s steering well clear of exposure to commercial securities like the complex derivatives being sliced and diced by major banks. He expects these "weapons of mass destruction" to cause problems for our economy again at some point.
There’s a less obvious but equally important way in which Wall Street distorts the economy: by defining "shareholder value" as short-term returns. If a CEO misses quarterly earnings by even a few cents per share, activist investors will push for that CEO to be fired. Yet the kinds of challenges companies face today—how to shift to entirely new digital business models, where to put operations when political risk is on the rise, how to anticipate the future costs of health, pensions and energy—are not quarterly problems. They are issues that will take years, if not decades, to resolve. Unfortunately, in a world in which the average holding period for a stock is about seven months, down from seven years four decades ago, CEOs grasp for the lowest-hanging fruit. They label tax-avoidance schemes as "strategic" and cut research and development in favor of sending those funds to investors in the form of share buybacks.
All of this will put American firms at a distinct disadvantage against global competitors with long-term mind-sets. McKinsey Global Institute data shows that between now and 2025, 7 out of 10 of the largest global firms are likely to come from emerging markets, and most will be family-owned businesses not beholden to(感激)the markets. Of course, there’s plenty we could do policy-wise to force companies and markets to think longer term—from corporate tax reform to bans on high-speed trading to shifts in corporate compensation. But just as Wall Street has captured corporate America, so has it captured Washington. Few mainstream politicians on either side of the aisle have much interest in fixing things, since they get so much of their financial backing from the Street. Unfortunately for them, the fringes of their parties—and voters—do care.
The author closes the passage with a______note.
选项
A、cautious
B、warning
C、sarcastic
D、humorous
答案
B
解析
态度题。作者在文章最后三句提到华盛顿和主要的政治家,他们也受到了华尔街的影响和股市利益的操控,似乎对于纠正目前经济领域出现的这些问题并不关心,但一些边缘政治家和选民们还是关心这个问题的。并在最后一句用unfortunately for them表达了作者对政界的警示,故答案为[B]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/kKFYFFFM
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
WhichofthefollowingisNOTtrueabouttheHouseofCommonsinBritain?
OntheCommonwealthBlueEnsign(theAustralianNationalFlag),thelargeststarhas______points,whichstandsforthesixorigi
Manypeopledreamofhavingasmarterbrain.PrincetonneurobiologistJosephZ.Tsienfoundthekey.InSeptemberheannounced
Whichofthefollowingistrueaboutthedifferencebetweenprivateschoolsandpublicschools?
JosephHelleriswidelyregardedasoneofthebestpost-WorldWarIIsatiristsforhisnovel______.
Theterm"leadership"isoneofthemostdifficultinan【M1】______educationaladministration.Tosome,aleaderissimpleonew
Thiswasthecapital’smostanxiousweeksinceSeptember11th.OnMondaythegovernmentissuedaredalertthatterroristattac
______isalongpoemofover3000linesandthenationalepicoftheEnglishpeople.
无声即沉默。沉默有各种各样。腹中空泛,思想一片苍白,故无言可发,这是沉默。热情已如柴薪尽燃,故而冷漠处世,无喜无悲,无忧无愤,对人世的一切都失去兴趣和欲望,这也是沉默。有过爱,有过恨,有过迷茫,有过颖悟,有过一呼百应的呐喊,有过得不到回报的呼唤,
A、Itisveryadventurous.B、Itisverysensational.C、Itisveryprivate.D、Itisveryinteresting.C本题设题点在访谈开篇处。根据句(1)可知,采访者认为这
随机试题
补体经典激活途径的始动分子是
A.激动中枢阿片受体B.阻断中枢阿片受体C.抑制中枢前列腺素合成酶D.抑制外周前列腺素合成酶E.抑制下丘脑体温调节中枢阿司匹林解热作用的机制是
患者,女,28岁。胃脘胀痛,痛引两胁,常因情志不遂而诱发或加重,嗳气,泛酸,口苦,舌淡红,苔薄白,脉弦。治疗方法是
张某向保险公司投保了车辆责任险,张某某日疲劳驾车,横穿马路时撞伤了周某,周某提起诉讼要求张某承担赔偿责任,以下说法正确的是()
按要求填空。写出一个既能点明原成语中的错字,又能说明改法的成语。例:呆若花鸡(移花接木)羊不可破()生无反顾()危居乐业()心猿意鹿()水破天惊()
表中Ⅰ的数值是()表中Ⅲ的数值是()
假设员工关系EMP(员工号,姓名,性别,部门,部门电话,部门负责人,家庭住址,家庭成员,成员关系)如下表所示。如果一个部门只能有一部电话和一位负责人,一个员工可以有多个家庭成员,那么关系EMP属于(31),且(32)问题;为了解决这一问题,应该将员工关系E
Whichofthefollowingisthecharacteristicoffreeradicals?
ANewApproachtoDebateI.Teachers’hesitation:debateisbeyondstudents’【T1】______【T1】______II.SuggestionsfromProf.Char
A、Thewomanpaidonly$120onherbooks.B、Joannasavedalotofmoneyontextbooks.C、Themandoesn’tthinktextbooksareexpe
最新回复
(
0
)