Introduction: Why
Ownership for All?
A Report on the COG Virtual Think Tank’s
first 18 months of operation
Deborah Groban
Olson,
COG Executive
Director and Project Coordinator of the Ford Foundation/COG/OEOC Project
Globalization, as organized by and for global
corporations, undermines local community cohesion. Is there a feasible,
community friendly, alternative? The growing global trend toward employee and
other broad forms of ownership provide possible solutions. The Capital
Ownership Group is seeking means to develop and implement them. Ownership for
All is the initial compilation of the first 18 months of work by the COG
working groups.
The Capital Ownership Group (COG) is a non-profit
network of and resource center for professionals, business, labor and
government leaders and staff, academics and activists on six continents,
working to broaden ownership to deal with the negative effects of
globalization. COG is primarily funded by the Ford Foundation, and operates the
Ford project from the Ohio Employee Ownership Center at Kent State University.
Its program staff, also serving as the initial COG discussion moderators,
include: COG Executive Director and Detroit based employee ownership attorney
Deborah Olson and Ohio Employee Ownership Center Kent State University staff
Prof. John Logue, Dan Bell, Steve Clem and Prof. Jacqueline Yates.
COG actively seeks partnerships with organizations
worldwide. Our network is international because we are acutely aware that
people in the developing and developed world may see these issues and proposed
solutions differently. Viable, humane solutions must serve the interests all
affected parties. To facilitate this global interchange we created the website
which we refer to as our “virtual think tank” at www.capitalownership.org. It
is our primary means of maintaining a growing number of global working groups.
Whenever, resources permit, we organize live meetings. Our programs include:
(1) an on-line conference center (hosting 11 working groups with 284
participants) enabling collaborative research and a forum for development of
policy proposals and implementation efforts. (The site is navigable in English,
Spanish, Russian and Chinese.); (2) an on-line library, including research
reports, case studies, proposed legislation; (3) and a global outreach program
hosting international strategy and policy meetings; seeking out and promoting
research on the effects of broad ownership; and continuously seeking to expand
links and collaborative relationships to include influential think tanks,
constituency organizations, governments, agencies, etc. As of April 2001, COG’s
web site has responded to over 240,000 data requests from people in 98
countries.
COG’s Mission is to create a coalition that
promotes broadened ownership of productive capital, in order to reduce
inequality of income and wealth; increase sustainable economic growth; expand
opportunities for people to realize their productive and creative potential;
stabilize local communities by improving living standards; and enhance the
quality of life for all.
Ownership for All includes reports of the first
six COG working groups. Each paper is a work in progress. Each discussion group
is on-going. The on-line library includes many publications that are or have
been under active discussion. Our goal is to develop policies, practices,
implementation strategies and mechanisms to facilitate the creation of sound,
practical means for local empowerment and economic self-sufficiency globally.
Our current method is to expand the COG network to include all major
organizations and policy makers concerned with those goals in working groups to
develop the means to those ends.
Globalization is polarizing income and wealth[1].
Capital concentration is increasing. Technology allows fewer workers to produce
ever-increasing quantities of goods. A rising tide of productivity does not
lift all ships, when low paid workers cannot afford to purchase the
ever-increasing quantity of goods they produce. Corporations are no longer
anchored to the countries that once determined the rules for corporate
relations to social needs. Global companies are racing against each other to
the lowest social wage.[2] This
race hastens global recession, when coupled with a significant overproduction
of manufacturing capacity as companies chase the lower social wage to ever
poorer countries at an increasing speed. Corporate investment in developing
countries brings previously unavailable resources and opportunities. But, does
a broad base of the local population benefit from foreign investment? Is there
a way to strengthen local communities facing a global economy?
Most of the world’s nation-states now embrace the
concept of political democracy, however flawed their implementation of it may
be. This occurs just as corporations are eclipsing nation-states as world
powers. Some global corporations are larger economic units and have greater
influence than some countries. The WTO treaties and protocols focus on
protecting the free flow of capital, if necessary, at the expense of control by
local civil authorities. Communities are losing the means to protect local
civil society interests if they conflict with corporate interests. Trade
agreements like the proposed Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI), the
Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA) and other World Trade Organization
(WTO) treaties are like the Interstate Commerce Clause without the rest of the
US Constitution (the parts protecting individual rights and the rights of
states to legislate concerning local health and safety). Are we headed toward
corporate feudalism?
COG proposes broadening ownership of capital
assets, and employee ownership particularly, as one countervailing force to
protect democracy. Just as political democracy is acknowledged as appropriate
power sharing in modern civil society, so broad shareholder rights would spread
economic democracy and create civil social control over corporations. While
nation-states still have considerable power, it makes sense for them to use it
to help their citizens obtain the franchise in corporations to maintain citizen
control as we enter the period of corporate hegemony. Thus, COG is collecting
and dissemination best practices and developing new policy proposals, to
increase the visibility and utility of these tools.
Based on our experience, broadening capital
ownership: (1) empowers individuals and families; (2) anchors capital and jobs
in communities; (3) fosters enlightened workplace practices and enhanced
education for workers; (4) develops a long term view on capital investment; and
(5) creates an incentive for environmental responsibility.
The American model for broadened ownership,
beginning with employee ownership, is attractive because it enables inclusion
of workers, who own no capital assets, in ownership of new retained earnings,
rather than redistribution of existing capital resources. It provides for a
shift in the overall distribution of capital over time as the broad worker
population learns new ownership skills. By shifting the distribution of capital
ownership discussion, from redistribution of existing capital, to distributing
the growth in the capital pie, Louis Kelso and Senator Long provided us a fair,
peaceful and politically viable means to change the distribution of the
ownership of productive assets.
Employee ownership is increasing throughout the
world. While there were only a few hundred employee owned firms in the US in
1973 with a few thousand employees, there are now more than 11,000 employee
stock ownership plan companies employing 9.5 million employee owners. Globally,
most high technology companies provide stock options to employees. Ten to 15%
of publicly traded companies in the US provide stock options to most of their
employees. Approximately 100 multinational corporations now provide employee
ownership to all their employees world-wide.[3]
Most of the formerly socialist countries have used some form of employee
ownership to privatize their economies and western countries have used it to
privatize formerly state owned business. Employee ownership has broad and
shallow support from right and left, so it is politically viable in many
countries and political systems. It also has great gut appeal to most people.
Many business owners feel it is the right thing to do. There is great diversity
of experience and opinion on the effects of these programs on local economies
and the relative benefit provided to workers in various economic strata.
Practitioners and participants in this global phenomenon have created the COG
network to evaluate and promulgate best practices from this experience and to
develop new policy proposals.
Ownership for All is a global anthology of
experiences with employee ownership policies, practices, policy proposals and
related debates. It summarizes the first six COG discussions. Thus far, the
discussion groups have:
•
cataloged and discussed best practices in employee
ownership policies currently used at the international, national and
sub-national level; including tax, technical assistance and subsidized loan policies,
and laws which merely enable employee ownership without assisting it;
•
discussed uses and misuses of employee ownership
in privatization policies, toward develop best practices criteria in this
much-abused area;
•
proposed new policy initiatives for governments
and novel methods of structuring ownership rights for adoption by companies
under present laws.
•
proposed research projects to determine the social
significance of ownership patterns to the status of women, working families and
the economically disadvantaged;
•
discussed the role international agencies and
trade policies play in affecting ownership patterns, and the potential role
these agencies and policies might play to change ownership patterns and provide
working people a greater chance at economic sustenance and improve civil
society.
A few examples of the range of participants and
collaborative activities inspired by COG follow:
Julia Markus of the Canadian Employee Share
Ownership and Investment Association, who has been working with Canadian MPs
interested in creating ownership broadening legislation, trades information
with Carla Dickstein, Research Director of Coastal Enterprises Inc., and recent
appointee to the Maine State Commission on Ownership, concerning ongoing
efforts in Canada and Maine to develop new ownership broadening policies. Both
of them use my proposals on providing sliding scale tax benefits based on
quantity and quality of employee ownership, and/or communities insisting on
obtaining a stock quid pro quo in exchange for government largesse to
companies. These ideas have been discussed in a variety of forms in the COG
Homestead group.
Various participants suggested looking at the
Swedish Meidner proposals for countrywide share ownership through the pension
system. Per Åhlström, currently executive director of the Swedish effort to
create labor venture funds, and Prof. John Logue of Kent State University,
provided both a description of and the political history of the demise of the
Meidner Plan and new interest in labor venture funds in Canada, Sweden, the
U.S..
Working economists (including among others
moderator, Keith Wilde, a senior economist for the Canadian government pension
system and Michael Harrington of the Milken Institute) who favor broad
ownership have been debating with Louis Kelso’s devoted followers whether
Kelso’s theories are useful to furthering the ends of broadening ownership in
the practical world. David Ellerman, Economic Advisor, Development Economics
for the World Bank, has propounded his residual claimancy theory regarding the
allocation of property rights, and has made his new book available in the COG
library.
Shann Turnbull, Australian investment banker and
employee ownership theorist and practitioner, has provided numerous articles to
the COG library and been an active discussant, propounding models for companies
governed by stakeholders where investor rights are time limited and devolve to
those who continue to create wealth for the company.
Vic Thorpe, Brussels based former General Secretary
(and current Senior Advisor) of ICEM (International Federation of Chemical,
Energy, Mine & General Workers’ Unions—21 million organized members in 350
member unions from 135 countries) runs a COG on-line discussion for labor
leaders discussing case studies and labor issues concerning employee ownership.
This is a new discussion and not reported in this version of Ownership for All.
Thomas Brandt, an economic development employee of
the State of Hawaii provided an essay on his dream for Hawaii, and has proposed
many tax, income and social security based ideas on broadening ownership.
Political Science Prof. Alan Zundel (University of
Nevada), who created the Institute for the Public Good based on his interest in
ownership based strategies to promote social justice, has proposed numerous
non-employee ownership ideas for broadening ownership to the Homestead group,
and has co-authored the Homestead discussion summary.
In addition to the initial discussions launched by
the COG staff, participants have begun moderating a number of other discussion
groups. These include: the India discussion, moderated by Umesh Gala, an
accountant in Bombay, India; the Economics of Ownership discussion, moderated
by Keith Wilde, an economist for the Canadian federal pension system; the
Spanish language discussion section moderated by Maria Adela Oliveros de
Miranda, Executive Director of RORAC, a Mexican community economic development
foundation; and the Russian language discussion group moderated by Olga
Klepikova, an OEOC staff member in Moscow, Russia; a discussion group for labor
union leaders moderated by Victor Thorpe, the immediate past General Secretary
of the International Confederation of Chemical Workers Unions (ICEM),
headquartered in Belgium; and a discussion on employee ownership tax policy
moderated by Aidan Langley, a partner in the London office of Deloitte &
Touche who specializes in representing global companies in designing equity
compensation programs. Participants are welcome to organize working groups around
a variety of topics.
We hope this anthology will help people developing
ownership programs, showing the breadth of the existing options, best practices
and pitfalls to avoid. The on-going discussions are intended to bring together
like-minded people who can help each other refine and strengthen existing best
practices and implement new policy ideas. Please join us at
www.capitalownership.org.
[1] The factual assumptions underlying this analysis of globalization’s effects come from several recent books that outline the problem and some of the policy and action alternatives COG is seeking to actualize. The books are One World Ready or Not, the Manic Logic of Global Capitalism by William Greider, Simon & Schuster (1997), and The Ownership Solution, by Jeff Gates, Addison-Wesley (1998); a Ford Foundation funded study done by Bob Stumberg at Georgetown University Law Center and Bill Schweke at the Corporation for Enterprise Democracy “Work on Balancing Democracy & Trade”1999 on the effects on the proposed MAI on local economic development tools; The Crisis of Global Capitalism, George Soros, Public Affairs (1998). Some of these ideas also derive from the work of Louis Kelso and his followers.
[2] “Social wage” meaning laws and policies which protect workers rights to minimum wages, safe working conditions, against child and slave labor, the right to organize unions and community environmental standards.
[3] Corey Rosen, “Whither Employee Ownership?” Owners at Work Winter 1999-2000