I also briefly discuss types of government intervention that may be successful in
improving
a strategic problem. Having done all of this, in the final portion I will try to undercut this
simple
signaling model by discussing how signaling theory does not explain major aspects of
current
corporate contracting in this age of enabling statutes. In the end, Easterbrook and
Fischel's hypothetical contracting norm remains a powerful tool for analyzing default
choice. My
thesis is not that corporate contracts are inefficient, but that we can't rely on small
transaction costs
or numerosity to ensure efficiency. To the extent that we retain a belief in the efficiency
of the
corporate nexus of contracts, this article stimulates us to look further for the structural
forces that
foster efficiency. In a world in which major financial decisions are best analyzed as
signals in models
of asymmetric information, the possibility for inefficient "excessive" signaling
through contractual provisions should remain an important area for further research.
Because
signaling theories so dominate the portion of the corporate contract relating to financial
structure,
it would be premature to wholly discount the possibility that inefficient signaling has
infected the
portion of the corporate contract relating to governance structure.
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