Today, a few thousand unelected corporate executives and shareholders make decisions that affect the way trillions of dollars move through the economy. For decades, corporate America has wielded its outsized influence to consolidate its power, resulting in a lopsided economy dominated by a small number of large, integrated firms that control essential decisions around resource production and distribution—crowding out opportunities for a low-carbon and high-care economy.
Roosevelt’s corporate power team aims to help rethink and rewrite the rules guiding how corporate America functions—and who it serves—so that firms contribute to a more equitable economy through innovation and public value rather than drive divisions through the extraction of private wealth for a few. Our research explores avenues to protect the public by redistributing power within, power over, and power between firms so that super-sized corporations are once again rule-takers and no longer rule-makers. Our team develops cutting-edge research both diagnosing the mechanics of corporate power and holding up new policy solutions. From corporate governance reform to taxation to antitrust, we look for new solutions to policy regimes long entrenched by the failed neoliberal paradigms of the past.
Guided by this emerging economic worldview, the corporate power program seeks to expose the inherent contradictions of current shareholder-first business models, while simultaneously weaving together a coherent set of commonsense alternatives for a thriving economy and an inclusive multi-racial democracy.
Our Corporate Power Team
Lev Menand
Fellow, Corporate PowerAs a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, Lev Menand researches US money and financial systems, including ways to enhance public access to and financial stability within those systems.
Todd Phillips
Fellow, Corporate PowerAs a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, Todd Phillips’ work focuses on financial regulation and regulatory policy, especially of digital assets and financial technologies.
Sanjukta Paul
Fellow, Corporate PowerAs a Roosevelt Institute fellow, Sanjukta Paul researches antitrust and corporate competition from a labor perspective.
Michael A. McCarthy
Fellow, Corporate PowerAs a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, Michael A. McCarthy researches and writes about public-interest financing, including mechanisms for more democratic, less shareholder-controlled retirement funding and renewable energy deployment.
Graham Steele
Fellow, Financial RegulationAs a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, Graham Steele researches financial regulation and banking reform, especially in the wake of financial crises.
Joshua Macey
Fellow, Corporate PowerAs a Roosevelt Institute fellow, Joshua Macey researches and writes about electric utility governance and energy law.
Indivar Dutta-Gupta
Fellow, TaxAs a Roosevelt fellow, Indivar Dutta-Gupta will research tax and care policy.
Portia Allen-Kyle
Fellow, TaxAs a Roosevelt fellow, Portia Allen-Kyle will research tax policy and racial equity.