Authors:
Lasse Folke Henriksen
Anton Grau Larsen
Christoph Houman Ellersgaard | Copenhagen Business School | Denmark
This paper investigates the evolution of the core group within the Danish corporate network from 1987-2016. Drawing on unique register data of all Danish corporate boards, combined with data from Danish personal registers, we show stability and change in the composition of the most central individuals during the last 30 years.
Drawing on an analytical sample of a total different 39,181 corporate boards, having 350,735 positions held by 130,548 individuals, we identify the individuals in the core of the corporate network in very month from 1987 to 2016. The characteristics of these individuals – gender, education, residence, social origin, etc. - are then explored using personal register data, which also enables to compare the attributes of the core with that of the general population.
Unlike the fracturing of corporate networks show both in the US (Mizruchi 2013) and in small states such as The Netherlands (Heemskerk 2008) or Switzerland (Bühlmann, David & Mach 2013), we show that a stable inner circle (Useem 1984) have dominated the Danish corporate networks in the past 30 years. Both the size of the core group of the elite networks, and the individuals within the core, remain very stable, not least during the last 25 years of the period analysed.
While the inner circle has opened slightly towards women, it remains a very homogenous group when looking at age composition and geographical location. Although the educational characteristics for this core group changes slightly over the past 30 years – with engineers and trainees to some extent being supplanted by economist and business economists – the overall level of social reproduction remains the same. Thus, we show that this group in general has a quite excslusive social background, with markedly higher chances of access for the offspring of the most affluent classes; in particular those engaged in management themselves.
To underline the influence of this inner circle outside the corporate boardrooms, we also combine our analysis with databases containing 4,000 other key affiliations from Denmark in 2013 and 2016. The network integration in other sectors show that inner circle members – in particular those with the longest tenure in the inner circle – are also much more likely to hold key positions in governing bodies outside the business world and in the interest organisations of business and social networks of the rest of the Danish power elite.
We argue that the particular ownerships structure of Danish corporations – with concentrated ownership in corporatist pension funds, foundations and family ownership still dominating business – has kept corporate control in the hands of this to a large extent self-recruiting elite group.