The Roosevelt Rundown features our top stories of the week.
View this in your browser and share with your friends ([link removed]) .
** How a Misguided Corporate Governance Theory Helped Lead to This Moment
------------------------------------------------------------
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, and Tesla CEO Elon Musk attend the presidential inauguration ceremony on January 20, 2025. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
The past decade has seen unprecedented levels of wealthy elites thumbing the scales of government to advance their own interests.
“I really think that corporate and elite power is what got us here,” Roosevelt Senior Fellow Lenore Palladino points out in a Roosevelt Institute Book Club discussion of her new book Good Company: Economic Policy After Shareholder Primacy ([link removed]) . “We may have a new class of corporate oligarchs in Elon Musk and his crew, but the underlying power of the economic elite and neoliberalism as our dominant economic ideology really is critical to understanding how we got here. And I believe it’s built in part on an edifice of shareholder primacy.”
Shareholder primacy—the corporate governance principle that a corporation’s primary goal should be to maximize value for shareholders—casts those who own the most shares as the key decision-makers for corporations and the primary beneficiaries of all corporate profits, to the detriment of workers and all other stakeholders. “It’s a theory of allocation, not innovation and production,” Palladino says.
This model, she argues, has proliferated because of a persistent myth that shareholders are always investors ([link removed]) . In actuality, the role of the modern shareholder is extractive, prioritizing short-term profit over long-term innovation and development, and should not be confused with the productive role of the investor. The buying and trading of shares on financial markets does not contribute anything to the company whose shares are being traded and has increasingly served to concentrate resources in the hands of a few elite players.
Listen to the full conversation, including Palladino’s policy proposals to subvert the shareholder primacy model, here: Roosevelt Institute Book Club Presents: Good Company: Economic Policy After Shareholder Primacy with Lenore Palladino ([link removed])
** What We're Talking About
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]
Share this Bluesky post ([link removed])
** What We're Reading
------------------------------------------------------------
(Theo Wargo/Getty Images)
* Cecile Richards, the longtime leader of Planned Parenthood who died Monday at age 67, taught us how to combine activism with institutional power ([link removed]) to advance feminist priorities in the 21st century.
* The Fed ([link removed]) and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) ([link removed]) left the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS), an international group of central banks committed to combating climate change.
+ “Withdrawing Fed participation from the climate conversation ([link removed]) among the world’s central bankers further undermines our country’s prospects for assessing and managing climate risk without having our ideological blinders on,” Roosevelt Senior Fellow Sarah Bloom Raskin said ([link removed]) . “The symbolism of this move at the beginning of 2025 is ominous.”
+ The NGFS vows to continue its work ([link removed]) regardless, acknowledging, in the words of Roosevelt Fellow Graham Steele, “the scientific and economic consensus that climate change poses material financial risks.”
* In New York Times Opinion, Jamelle Bouie ([link removed]) cited Franklin D. Roosevelt’s first inaugural address ([link removed]) to demonstrate how antidemocratic influencers misunderstand basic history.
============================================================
Join the Conversation
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** LinkedIn ([link removed])
** YouTube ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
** Update your preferences ([link removed])
. Tell us which emails you want to receive!
If you are interested in supporting the Roosevelt Institute, ** click here ([link removed])
.
Copyright © 2025 Roosevelt Institute, all rights reserved.
570 Lexington Ave, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10022
rooseveltinstitute.org
If you would like to unsubscribe from this list, ** click here ([link removed])
.