One share, one vote
One share, one vote is a standard found in corporate law and corporate governance, which suggests that each person who invests money in a company has one vote per share of the company they own, equally with other shareholders. Often, shares with one vote each are referred to as common stock. Most systems of corporate law discourage shares without votes unless they have preferential dividends or liquidation rights, and shares with multiple voting rights are discouraged altogether so as to prevent the concentration of corporate power.
Countries with this system
- The United Kingdom
- Canada
- The Commonwealth of Australia
- The Federal Republic of Nigeria
- New Zealand
- The People's Republic of China
- Jamaica
- Ghana
- United States