In Economics, the Fisher separation theorem asserts that the primary objective of a corporation will be the maximization of its present value, regardless of the preferences of its shareholders. The theorem, therefore, separates management's "productive opportunities" from the entrepreneur's "market opportunities". It was proposed byâÂÂand is named afterâÂÂthe economist Irving Fisher.
The theorem has its "clearest and most famous exposition" https://web.archive.org/web/20080429203224/http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/essays/capital/fisherinvest.htm in the Theory of Interest (1930); particularly in the "second approximation to the theory of interest" (II:VI).
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The Fisher separation theorem states that:
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Fisher showed the above as follows: