Synopsis
                  Analyzes the causes and effects of short-term thinking in American business and suggests ways corporate America can regain its competitive edge in the world economy
                                                  
                                            Reviews
                                      
                  In this uncommonly enlightening survey, Jacobs, a former U.S. Treasury Department corporate finance director, condemns as counterproductive the quick-profit approach of many of America's corporate directors and investor-owners. Such short-sightedness, he believes, undermines long-range product research, financing and marketing, and thus reduces America's industrial competitiveness with Japan and Germany. Sharply challenging the prevailing corporate structure, in which he discerns a lack of executive "accountability," Jacobs also points out stubborn anomalies in the board-of-directors system and the roles of lender banks, bondholders and institutional share-owning investors. This comprehensive corrective plan includes banking reform that would expand and centralize "cost-of-capital" financial services; motivationally deferred stock-bonus management compensation; and investor/owner representation on a firm's board of directors. Fortune Book Club alternate. 
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
A savvy, wide-ranging audit of the reasons American business is losing ground to Asian and European rivals, plus thoughtful prescriptions for retrieving the situation. Having recently spent two years as the US Treasury's director of corporate finance, Jacobs (now a Washington-based consultant) has an insider's sophisticated appreciation of the structural issues he addresses. Arguing that the commercial equivalent of instant gratification is a root cause of the nation's eroding competitiveness in global markets, the author identifies a number of problem areas--among others, disengaged investors, an adversarial system of corporate governance, high-cost capital, and shortsighted executive-compensation practices. Citing the enviable records compiled by major enterprises in Germany and Japan (where cross-ownership among affiliated companies, including depository institutions, creates a stable source of expansion/diversification funds as well as inducements to take a longer view), Jacobs offers a detailed package of reform proposals. He recommends, for instance, employing carrots and sticks to develop a new class of patient investors willing and able to work constructively with the concerns whose securities they hold. The author also counsels making corporate directors genuinely independent and hence more accountable to stockholders. Though he doubts Congress is up to the job, Jacobs would like to see a thoroughgoing overhaul of the US banking/financial system. Lastly, he urges managerial pay policies that reward long-term results, not tenure or expedients. Perceptive analyses of socioeconomic problems that require the immediate attention of the electorate--and of special interests that have failed to heed Benjamin Franklin's still timely warning: ``We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately.'' -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
The VCR was invented in America, but try to find one made here. The same is true of other products. As a Treasury Department official, Jacobs studied ways to improve the competitiveness of American industry. He knows the nuts and bolts of the financial system and why it does not produce long-term thinking. As a result, Jacobs focuses on the role of financial matters (corporate control, takeovers, banking) to the exclusion of other causes of the problem. The level of writing is accessible to a layperson, though the content is somewhat technical. Recommended for business collections in large libraries.
- Mark Guyer, Stark Cty. Dist . Lib., Canton, Ohio
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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