Private equity and the flight of the phoenix four-- the collapse of MG Rover in the UK
This paper explores the nature of the co-called 'private equity business model' (PEBM) and assesses its shortcomings, using the illustrative example of the role of private equity in structuring the finance and subsequent collapse of MG Rover, as the automotive industry has been a significant destination for private equity financing. The paper outlines the nature of the PEBM. It then details how the PEBM extracts value, before stressing how this can affect workers in a portfolio business. We argue that the emergence of the PEBM changes the basis of competitive rules in organizations and the running of erstwhile going concerns, necessitating a need for further regulation--particularly, how to secure wider stakeholder oversight without reducing the efficiency of PEBM concerns. Copyright 2010, Oxford University Press.
Year of publication: |
2010
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Authors: | Bailey, David ; Clark, Ian ; Ruyter, Alex De |
Published in: |
Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society. - Cambridge Political Economy Society, ISSN 1752-1378. - Vol. 3.2010, 3, p. 367-382
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Publisher: |
Cambridge Political Economy Society |
Saved in:
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