-----Original Message-----
From: David Sadoway [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2011 11:00 PM
To: michael gurstein
Subject: Worker-Owners of America, Unite ! / Gar Alperovitz


https://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/15/opinion/worker-owners-of-america-unite.ht
ml?_r=1&hpw

December 14, 2011
Worker-Owners of America, Unite!

By GAR ALPEROVITZ

College Park, Md.

THE Occupy Wall Street protests have come and mostly gone, and whether they
continue to have an impact or not, they have brought an astounding fact to
the public's attention: a mere 1 percent of Americans own just under half of
the country's financial assets and other investments. America, it would
seem, is less equitable than ever, thanks to our no-holds-barred capitalist
system.

But at another level, something different has been quietly brewing in recent
decades: more and more Americans are involved in co-ops, worker-owned
companies and other alternatives to the traditional capitalist model. We
may, in fact, be moving toward a hybrid system, something different from
both traditional capitalism and socialism, without anyone even noticing.

Some 130 million Americans, for example, now participate in the ownership of
co-op businesses and credit unions. More than 13 million Americans have
become worker-owners of more than 11,000 employee-owned companies, six
million more than belong to private-sector unions.

And worker-owned companies make a difference. In Cleveland, for instance, an
integrated group of worker-owned companies, supported in part by the
purchasing power of large hospitals and universities, has taken the lead in
local solar-panel installation, "green" institutional laundry services and a
commercial hydroponic greenhouse capable of producing more than three
million heads of lettuce a year.

Local and state governments are likewise changing the nature of American
capitalism. Almost half the states manage venture capital efforts, taking
partial ownership in new businesses. Calpers, California's public pension
authority, helps finance local development projects; in Alaska, state oil
revenues provide each resident with dividends from public investment
strategies as a matter of right; in Alabama, public pension investing has
long focused on state economic development.

Moreover, this year some 14 states began to consider legislation to create
public banks similar to the longstanding Bank of North Dakota; 15 more began
to consider some form of single-payer or public-option health care plan.

Some of these developments, like rural co-ops and credit unions, have their
origins in the New Deal era; some go back even further, to the Grange
movement of the 1880s. The most widespread form of worker ownership stems
from 1970s legislation that provided tax benefits to owners of small
businesses who sold to their employees when they retired. Reagan-era
domestic-spending cuts spurred nonprofits to form social enterprises that
used profits to help finance their missions.

Recently, growing economic pain has provided a further catalyst. The
Cleveland cooperatives are an answer to urban decay that traditional job
training, small-business and other development strategies simply do not
touch. They also build on a 30-year history of Ohio employee-ownership
experiments traceable to the collapse of the steel industry in the 1970s and
'80s.

Further policy changes are likely. In Indiana, the Republican state
treasurer, Richard Mourdock, is using state deposits to lower interest costs
to employee-owned companies, a precedent others states could easily follow.
Senator Sherrod Brown, Democrat of Ohio, is developing legislation to
support worker-owned strategies like that of Cleveland in other cities. And
several policy analysts have proposed expanding existing government "set
aside" procurement programs for small businesses to include co-ops and other
democratized enterprises.

If such cooperative efforts continue to increase in number, scale and
sophistication, they may suggest the outlines, however tentative, of
something very different from both traditional, corporate-dominated
capitalism and traditional socialism.

It's easy to overestimate the possibilities of a new system. These efforts
are minor compared with the power of Wall Street banks and the other giants
of the American economy. On the other hand, it is precisely these
institutions that have created enormous economic problems and fueled public
anger.

During the populist and progressive eras, a decades-long buildup of public
anger led to major policy shifts, many of which simply took existing ideas
from local and state efforts to the national stage. Furthermore, we have
already seen how, in moments of crisis, the nationalization of auto giants
like General Motors and Chrysler can suddenly become a reality. When the
next financial breakdown occurs, huge injections of public money may well
lead to de facto takeovers of major banks.

And while the American public has long supported the capitalist model, that,
too, may be changing. In 2009 a Rasmussen poll reported that Americans under
30 years old were "essentially evenly divided" as to whether they preferred
"capitalism" or "socialism."

A long era of economic stagnation could well lead to a profound national
debate about an America that is dominated neither by giant corporations nor
by socialist bureaucrats. It would be a fitting next direction for a
troubled nation that has long styled itself as of, by and for the people.

Gar Alperovitz, a professor of political economy at the University of
Maryland and a founder of the Democracy Collaborative, is the author of
"America Beyond Capitalism." 


_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to