WORKER OWNERSHIP
Worker Co-ops
Worker Co-ops
Co-ops are more productive, robust, resistant to price shocks, and increase worker pay and engagement (as opposed to a firm organized by a traditional employer-employee framework). Check out this resource too for more information.
- Doucouliagos 95
- Meta-analysis of 43 studies comparing various forms of worker participation in business
- Found that “profit sharing, worker ownership, and worker participation in decision making are all positively associated with productivity”
- These observed correlations are stronger in worker-managed firms than in traditional capitalist firms
- Bit outdated as it’s from 1995 and only shows correlation, but still useful
- O’Boyle et al. 16
- Meta-analysis of 102 samples representing 56,984 firms
- Finds that employee ownership of businesses has a statistically significant but small impact on business performance
- “We do find that the effect of employee ownership on performance has increased in studies over time and that studies with samples from outside the USA report stronger effects than those within.”
- Pérotin 12
- The study found increased productivity in the case of:
- Increased profit sharing (note: this may also involve reverse causality, although data on ESOPs seems to thoroughly verify this anyway)
- A higher proportion of employees becoming cooperative member, thus increasing participation in decision-making (in France and Italy)
- A greater proportion of workers on the board (in the UK)
- Williams 07
- After 1 year, 50-60% of corporations fail while only 10% of cooperatives do
- After 5 years, 90% of Co-Ops remain open while only 3-5% of standard corporations do
- Co-op Law
- Co-ops have been shown multilaterally to be more resilient and less likely to fail than traditionally-operated businesses
- Coops also face unique barriers to entry which might be mitigated through the transformation of existing enterprises into worker’s coops.
- Burdín & Dean 09
- Economic analysis of capitalist firms vs worker cooperatives in Uruguay from 1996-2005
- Coops have a greater correspondence between profit increase and wage increase
- Employment in coops is more resistant to price shocks
- Employment has a negative correlation with wages for capitalist firms and a positive correlation with wages in worker coops
- Abell 14
- Coops make $652 billion in revenue, hold around $3 trillion in assets, and employ nearly one million people in the U.S., showing that coops are already successfully contributing to the U.S. economy
- Data shows that worker coops:
- can increase worker incomes by 70-80%
- have 9-19% greater levels of productivity
- have 45% lower turnover rates
- are 30% less likely to fail in the first few years of operation
- Sabatini et al. 12
- Study based on a 2011 questionnaire in Trento, Italy (where coops make up a substantial portion of businesses)
- Found that employment in cooperative enterprises increases trust between workers relative to public and private enterprises
- 47.5% increase relative to public enterprises
- 36.9% increase relative to private enterprises
- Park 18
- In conventional firms, there is a negative relationship between job demands and worker commitment
- This negative relationship was not found in worker co-ops
- Erdal 12
- Study of three Italian towns of similar demographics, income, and geography
- The town with the most worker cooperatives experienced the following:
- Better mental and physical health, as well as longer lives
- Children were less likely to skip school and skipped school less
- Less crime, including less domestic violence and greater feelings of safety.
- Higher rates of ‘social participation’ (joining clubs and charities, giving blood, voting)
- Perception of a more positive society, more supportive personal networks, and more trust in the government
- Note: this study fails to prove causation, and only establishes a correlation between coop prevalence and community wellbeing
- https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/6294741.pdf
ESOP and Employee Ownership
ESOP and Employee Ownership
Increased employee engagement in decision-making at all levels is consistently associated with better performance.
- NCEO (National Center for Employee Ownership) 17
- Analyzing the effects of employee ownership (typically ESOPs, where workers gain a stake in their company and its stock)
- Data shows:
- 33% higher income from wages (This holds true at all wage levels)
- 53% longer median job tenure (5.2 years compared to 3.4 years)
- Employee owners also have access to an array of benefits at work including:
- flexible work schedules
- retirement plans
- parental leave
- tuition reimbursement
- Childcare benefits (23% of employee-owners compared to 5% of non-employee-owners)
- NCEO Economic Growth Report
- More data on employee-owner firms
- Compared to traditional firms, ESOP and companies with employee ownership:
- Generate 2.5% more new jobs per year
- Have a workforce that is ⅓ to ¼ as likely to be laid off
- Kruse 02
- Analysis of a variety of studies on employee ownership
- Productivity improves by an extra 4-5% on average in the year an ESOP (employee stock ownership) is adopted, and the higher productivity level is maintained in subsequent years.
- This one-time jump is more than twice the average annual productivity growth of the U.S. economy over the past 20 years.
- Most studies find higher organizational commitment and identification under employee ownership, while studies are mixed between favorable and neutral findings on job satisfaction, motivation, and other behavioral measures.
- Kruse & Blasi 95
- META-ANALYSIS of 52 studies regarding employee ownership, focusing primarily on employee attitudes/behaviours and productivity/profitability
- Finds higher levels of employee commitment in ESOPS but mixed results in regards to stuff like satisfaction and motivation
- While it’s hard to make out a clear causal relation between employee ownership and more productivity, the two factors are certainly associated with each other
Additional Resources
Additional Resources
- ISR: International Socialist Review
- Coops are effective, but cannot in themselves facilitate a transition to socialism
- Mondragon Cooperative Corporation, the world’s largest coop, has restructured to move its practices more in line with those of a traditional privately-owned corporation of a similar size.
- Co-operatives UK (video)
- Cute lil explanation of cooperatives
- IWDC
- Different types of coops - ‘Worker Coop’ is our interest
- OBOS
- Massive Norwegian cooperative building association - 435,000 members
- Richard D. Wolff
- Excellent Richard Wolff write-up on worker coops.
- Truthout: Wolff 14
- Another Richard Wolff article, discussing social, political and economic barriers to forming workers’ coops.
- The Nation: Chen 19
- Cute think piece on the value of worker coops
- RMEOC
- Unorganized ESOP Factsheet
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A massive library on literature regarding worker coops
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Fat google doc containing a LOT of info on worker coops
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https://www.reddit.com/r/VaushV/comments/lxk9b1/destiny_and_shitty_arguments_for_his_ideas_high/
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Cooperative document sheet (unorganized and weirdly formatted)
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ownership structures, evidence for socialism - compilation of studies in favor of worker coops
- https://www.co-oplaw.org/special-topics/worker-cooperatives-performance-and-success-factors/#:~:text=15-,Why%20Worker%20Cooperatives%20Are%20So%20Scarce,creation%2C%20not%20to%20their%20survival talks about barriers to worker coop penetration into the market, mostly summing up these barriers not to coop non-competitiveness but difficulty getting them started