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COG
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EOnation Discussion |
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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: Meidner Plan
Dear Thomas Brandt, I have no idea what has happened to the Meidner Plan, which was being discussed in the US in the 1970s. As I recall, it was one among many schemes to set up a trust to acquire shares in Swedish industries based on collectively bargained contributions by employers, with voting power over the corporate shares to be placed in the hands of representatives of the labor federation, the employers' association and, I think, the government. The workers themselves would have no shareholder rights, no voting power and no right to second incomes from the assets set aside for their retirement. It thus centralized economic power in an elite and left the workers without direct economic power and wholly dependent on leaders who might or might not be democratically accountable to them. Rather than decentralizing ownership, the Meidner Plan socialized and collectivized ownership. The same criticism can be directed at collectively bargained defined benefit pension plans, which Peter Drucker called "pension plan socialism." In contrast, the "democratic" ESOP, which I have always favored, is structured to build full shareholder rights (except the right to sell shares to outsiders), including full voting powers, into workers on the shares they acquire through the ESOP. Another empowerment-related issue raised by the Meidner Plan is whether worker access to ownership should be mandatory or voluntary in its operation. Kelsonians favor minimizing the use of mandatory tax "entitlements" (i.e., tax credits and tax subsidies) and the use of coercion directly or indirectly through the government. Kelsonians instead would favor means based on maximizing opportunities to acquire "social goods" like capital credit, encouraging voluntary decisions to take advantage of a restructured economic system and avoiding class warfare attacks on the rich. In a healthy, growing and fully participatory market economy, the appropriations process is more direct and more democratically accountable than the revenue-raising system for funding the "social safety net" for those in need. In other words, Kelso advocated putting a lid on any further increases in capital accumulations for the super-rich and would decentralize their "excess accumulations" (i.e., amounts that generate incomes beyond their willingness or ability to consume marketable goods and services) through changes in estate and gift tax laws. In contrast, Marx and socialists generally would confiscate not only their excess accumulations but all their property. Like the pope, CESJ would judge any change in the economic system on the basis of its impact on the dignity, freedom, empowerment and self-determination of all persons, the rich as well as the poor. And that is why on logic and principle binary economists are critical of solutions that depend on a redistributive tax system and highly centralized economic power, rather than a radical restructuring of the monetary and tax system aimed at economic empowerment of all people, with a preferential option for the most deprived members of human society. Hence, we would favor the Kelso Plan over the Meidner Plan or any other plan based on demonizing Bill Gates and the super-rich. Bill Gates is no more of a demon than Jeff Gates or any of us in COG. It's the system, not the person, that must be radically transformed to restore human dignity and economic justice, not just tinkered with. Thomas Brandt wrote: > Since I received no response when I sent this request to the COG list only, I > thought I'd try again by sending it to a wider audience. > > Can anyone direct me to up-to-date info on Sweden's Meidner Plan? I've had no > luck finding anything on the Internet, and even Corey Rosen wasn't able to >help. > > Thanks for your time and consideration.
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