Hobbes Meets the Modern Business Corporation

Polity 1 (53):101-131 (2021)
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Abstract

Political theory today has expanded its scope to debate business corporations, conceiving of them as political actors, not (just) private actors in the market place. This article shows the continuing relevance of Thomas Hobbes’s work for this debate. Hobbes is commonly treated as a defender of the so-called concession theory, which traces the legitimacy of corporations to their being chartered by sovereign state authorities for public purposes. This theory is widely judged to be anachronistic for contemporary business corporations, because these can now be freely formed, on the basis of private initiative. However, a close reading of the crucial passages in Hobbes’s work reveals a more subtle view, which rejects this private/public dualism. Hobbes’s reflections on the companies of merchants of his day provide room for business corporations’ pursuit of private purposes, while keeping them embedded in a public framework of authority. Moreover, by criticizing the monopoly status of these companies, he opens up a way to integrate market failure arguments from modern economics into concession theory. The “neo-Hobbesian concession theory” emerging from this analysis shows how concession theory can accommodate private initiative and economic analysis, and thus be a relevant position in the debate about the modern business corporation

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Rutger Claassen
Utrecht University

Citations of this work

Wealth creation without domination. The fiduciary duties of corporations.Rutger Claassen - 2024 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 27 (3):317-338.
Property as power: A theory of representation.Rutger Claassen - forthcoming - Journal of Social Philosophy.
Las corporaciones en la teoría política moderna: posiciones desde Hobbes y Hegel.Gonzalo Ricci Cernadas & Juan Pablo de Nicola - 2023 - Res Pública. Revista de Historia de Las Ideas Políticas 26 (2):129-140.

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