Book contents
- The Cambridge Handbook of Shareholder Engagement and Voting
- The Cambridge Handbook of Shareholder Engagement and Voting
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- In Memoriam
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Asia
- Part II Australia and North America
- Part III Europe
- 13 Shareholder Democracy in Denmark: Contrasting Law on the Books and Law in Practice
- 14 Shareholder Engagement and Voting in France
- 15 Shareholder Engagement in Germany
- 16 Shareholder Engagement and Voting in Greece
- 17 Shareholder Engagement and Voting in Italy
- 18 Shareholder Voting and Engagement in Norway
- 19 Shareholder Voting and Engagement in the Netherlands: The Dutch Institutional Approach
- 20 Shareholder Engagement and Voting in the United Kingdom
- Part IV Comparative Perspectives
- Index
16 - Shareholder Engagement and Voting in Greece
from Part III - Europe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 September 2022
- The Cambridge Handbook of Shareholder Engagement and Voting
- The Cambridge Handbook of Shareholder Engagement and Voting
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- In Memoriam
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Asia
- Part II Australia and North America
- Part III Europe
- 13 Shareholder Democracy in Denmark: Contrasting Law on the Books and Law in Practice
- 14 Shareholder Engagement and Voting in France
- 15 Shareholder Engagement in Germany
- 16 Shareholder Engagement and Voting in Greece
- 17 Shareholder Engagement and Voting in Italy
- 18 Shareholder Voting and Engagement in Norway
- 19 Shareholder Voting and Engagement in the Netherlands: The Dutch Institutional Approach
- 20 Shareholder Engagement and Voting in the United Kingdom
- Part IV Comparative Perspectives
- Index
Summary
All SAs (whether listed or not) have basically the same structure comprising a General Meeting, a Board of Directors (BoD), and auditors, whereas the GM is the supreme organ of a SA, tasked (explicitly or implicitly) with deciding on any matter related to the Company. The GM is called mainly by the BoD, minority shareholders or specific other authorized persons. The ownership structure of Greek listed companies is highly concentrated and a high number of listed companies are family owned. Although the Greek Company Act (GCA) provides for modern forms of GM based on electronic participation or remote voting methods as well as proxy voting, listed companies stick to the traditional methods without a real market for stewardship services. Under the one-share-one vote principle and the application of specific quorum and majority rules (with no general “Majority of Minority rule”) the controlling shareholders have a broad field of action, whereas minority shareholders are restricted to specific minority or individual shareholder rights. Under these circumstances, controversial resolutions, proxy fights and the need to access the Shareholders’ Register are a rather rare phenomenon. The introduction of shareholders’ associations has not altered the situation so far.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Handbook of Shareholder Engagement and Voting , pp. 330 - 349Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022