CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Employee Capitalism or Corporate Socialism? Broad-Based Employee Stock Ownership

December 2009

Written by: E. Han Kim, Paige Ouimet

Working Paper Number:

CES-09-44

Abstract

How employee share ownership plans (ESOPs) affect employee compensation and shareholder value depends on the size. Small ESOPs, defined as those controlling less than 5% of outstanding shares, benefit both workers and shareholders, implying positive productivity gains. However, the effects of large ESOPs on worker compensation and shareholder value are more or less neutral, suggesting little productivity gains. These differential effects appear to be due to two non-value-creating motives specific to large ESOPS: (1) To form management-worker alliances ala Pagano and Volpin (2005), wherein management bribes workers to garner worker support in thwarting hostile takeover threats and (2) To substitute wages with ESOP shares by cash constrained firms. Worker compensation increases when firms under takeover threats adopt large ESOPs, but only if the firm operates in a non-competitive industry. The effects on firm valuation also depend on the strength of product market competition: When the competition is strong (weak), most of the productivity gains accrue to employees (shareholders). Competitive industry also implies greater job mobility within the industry, enabling workers to take a greater portion of productivity gains.

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company, manager, takeover, employee, corporate, ownership, managerial, shareholder, competitiveness, profit, incentive, productivity firms, compensation, share

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Standard Statistical Establishment List, Internal Revenue Service, Standard Industrial Classification, Center for Economic Studies, University of Chicago, Longitudinal Business Database, Center for Research in Security Prices, Chicago Census Research Data Center, Washington University, Economic Census, Business Register, National Opinion Research Center, Special Sworn Status, Herfindahl Hirschman Index, University of Michigan

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