Einde inhoudsopgave
Towards Social and Ecological Corporate Governance (IVOR nr. 132) 2024/198
198 Standards for weighing of interests.
mr. R.A.G. Heesakkers, datum 23-12-2023
- Datum
23-12-2023
- Auteur
mr. R.A.G. Heesakkers
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS944797:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Ondernemingsrecht (V)
Voetnoten
Voetnoten
See section 2.2.2, nr. 14, above.
Cf. Claassen 2018.
Art. 2:8 Dutch Civil Code; see also Van der Heijden & Van der Grinten 2013, nr. 231, p. 483 for an early notion of weighing the interests of stakeholders; also Timmerman 2023a.
Van Ginneken & Timmerman 2011, nr. 12-14.
Van Ginneken & Timmerman 2011, nr. 5-8; see also nr. 9-10 regarding the wide degree of discretion that boards receive from the Enterprise Chamber due to the difficulty of ascertaining the proportionality of their decisions.
Including a potential conflict between social or ecological interests, for example between SDGs or human rights.
See Friedman 1970; also section 3.2.3, nr. 59, above.
Cf. Claassen 2018.
See Strategy& (part of PwC network), 2018 CEO Success Study, 15 May 2019, online, reporting that ethical issues constitute the primary reason for CEOs of the world’s largest listed corporations to be fired, indicating the need for clear ethical standards to which CEOs are expected to adhere.
See section 2.2.2, nr. 16, above for a definition of issue 2 (weighing of interests).
In addition to the responsibility to encourage the durable success of its corporation and its enterprise, the legal job description of the board also includes a duty of care when considering and weighing the interests of all stakeholders involved.1 Particularly when social and ecological interests are involved, this weighing of interests may effectively amount to a form of public policy-making in which a central authority distributes common and scarce resources amongst competing constituents.2 Since corporate boards are not legitimized through democratic mechanisms to engage in such public policy-making, clear ethical standards are needed in order to legitimize and evaluate their weighing of interests. Dutch corporate law provides a starting point for articulating such standards. In general, the board has a responsibility to weigh the interests of its stakeholders in a reasonable and fair manner (redelijkheid en billijkheid).3 In practice, Van Ginneken and Timmerman provide a more specific standard for guiding boards in their consideration of interests by suggesting a test of proportionality (evenredigheidsbeginsel).4 This test is a threefold one. The board should ascertain whether its decision meets the following criteria: (i) it is fit to fulfil its responsibility (and, for example, not just in its own interest), (ii) it is necessary to achieve its responsibility (meaning that no subsidiary or alternative decision with less severe consequences for stakeholders is possible) and (iii) that it does not result in any unreasonable objections by stakeholders in relation to the expected benefit of the decision.5
Particularly the third part of the test of proportionality may cause difficulties when boards include social and ecological interests in their weighing process. Boards may need more explicit publicly legitimized standards to determine which social and ecological interests should be considered, and more importantly how to weigh the objections and gravity of such public interests against other more private interests.6 As boards lack democratic or public legitimization, they face uncertainty with regard to the norms according to which they are held accountable for weighing social and ecological interests.7 Meanwhile, social and ecological stakeholders lack any legal standards and mechanisms to hold boards accountable for their potential maltreatment of social and ecological interests.8 Both make boards vulnerable to unpredictable assessments in non-legal courts of public opinion.9 Therefore, an issue arises in Dutch corporate law in relation to the ethical standards according to which boards should be legitimized and held accountable for weighing social and ecological interests.10
ISSUE 2 (WEIGHING OF INTERESTS): according to which ethical standards should the board be legitimized and held accountable for weighing social and ecological interests?