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A bailout won’t fix Bombardier’s biggest problems: family control and dual-class shares

Pierre Beaudoin is the former CEO of Bombardier and a member of the Beaudoin family that controls 60 per cent of the company along with the Bombardier family through a dual-class share system.

Many alternatives regarding the way forward for troubled Bombardier Inc. happen to be proposed. The Quebec government has already committed $1.3 billion in aid and today some type of moral argument has been levelled at Ottawa to throw money into Bombardier’s cap also. This is a horrible idea from a governance perspective, in addition to a taxpayer perspective.

Let’s be clear about Bombardier’s governance reality: The Bombardier/Beaudoin families hold almost 60 per cent of voting power within the corporation, despite holding a fiscal interest of just one-quarter of this figure. This can be a dual-class-share firm that simply isn’t flying.

A federal bailout would place perhaps a billion or even more taxpayer dollars in the hands of family that is insulated from governance accountability because of the corporate structure that it has chosen. This insulation and insufficient accountability have not been good for the organization. Over the past 5 years, Bombardier’s stock price has declined a lot more than 75 percent. Why should Canadian taxpayers be on the hook for Bombardier’s poor corporate governance?

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