Employee ownership creates stronger companies, helps workers build wealth, and fosters a fairer, more stable society. In this book, two leading experts show how it works-and how it can be greatly expanded. Wages don't cover the bills. Wealth inequality is growing. Social trust is eroding. There are endless debates about what to do, but one key factor is inexplicably left out: who owns the companies that drive the economy?Ownership matters. Ownership by a few means benefits for a few. But if you spread ownership around, you spread the benefits of capitalism around. Employee ownership lets…mehr
Employee ownership creates stronger companies, helps workers build wealth, and fosters a fairer, more stable society. In this book, two leading experts show how it works-and how it can be greatly expanded. Wages don't cover the bills. Wealth inequality is growing. Social trust is eroding. There are endless debates about what to do, but one key factor is inexplicably left out: who owns the companies that drive the economy?Ownership matters. Ownership by a few means benefits for a few. But if you spread ownership around, you spread the benefits of capitalism around. Employee ownership lets workers build real wealth, not just pick up a paycheck. And it's a piece of the puzzle that's in plain sight. As Corey Rosen and John Case point out, there are already thousands of prosperous employee-owned companies. Rosen and Case explain why so many companies end up being owned by Wall Street shareholders or private equity firms-and why that kind of ownership encourages a focus on short-term profits rather than the long-term sustainability needed by employees, communities, and the environment. They show the limits of reform efforts that don't address the essential issue of who owns what. But the heart of the book is a deep dive into how employee ownership originated, how it works now, and what needs to be done to expand it. The book looks at how the idea is growing, both in the United States and around the world-and why all sides of the political spectrum support it. Rosen and Case offer a vivid portrait of a form of ownership that results in more prosperous workers, more responsible companies, and a fairer, more stable society.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Corey Rosen, PhD, is the founder and senior staff member of the National Center for Employee Ownership. He coauthored, along with John Case and Martin Staubus, Equity: Why Employee Ownership Is Good for Business (Harvard Business School Press, May 2005). Over the years, he has written, edited, or contributed to dozens of books, articles, and research papers on employee ownership. He is generally regarded as the leading expert on employee ownership in the world and serves on several ESOP company boards. John Case is a veteran observer and analyst of the business world and a nationally known writer on business and economics. He is author or coauthor of six books and collaborator on many others, including the international bestseller Financial Intelligence. He has written for a variety of periodicals, including the Atlantic, the New Republic, Inc., and Harvard Business Review.
Inhaltsangabe
Contents Introduction: Ownership Matters Part I: What’s Wrong with What We Have? 1. The Ownership Crazy Quilt 2. Wall Street: Faceless Ownership 3. Private Equity: Concentrated Ownership Part II: How Can We Change Things? 4. The Limits of (Conventional) Reform 5. Ownership in Today’s Economy Part III: Reinventing Capitalism for the 21st Century 6. A Different Kind of Company 7. Why Isn’t There More Employee Ownership? 8. Opportunity #1: Employee Ownership on Wall Street 9. Opportunity #2: Private Equity and Impact Investing 10. Opportunity #3: Trusts, Co-ops, and the Gig Economy 11. Opportunity #4: Policies and Programs for Spreading Employee Ownership 12. Tomorrow the World Conclusion: How You Can Make a Difference
Contents Introduction: Ownership Matters Part I: What’s Wrong with What We Have? 1. The Ownership Crazy Quilt 2. Wall Street: Faceless Ownership 3. Private Equity: Concentrated Ownership Part II: How Can We Change Things? 4. The Limits of (Conventional) Reform 5. Ownership in Today’s Economy Part III: Reinventing Capitalism for the 21st Century 6. A Different Kind of Company 7. Why Isn’t There More Employee Ownership? 8. Opportunity #1: Employee Ownership on Wall Street 9. Opportunity #2: Private Equity and Impact Investing 10. Opportunity #3: Trusts, Co-ops, and the Gig Economy 11. Opportunity #4: Policies and Programs for Spreading Employee Ownership 12. Tomorrow the World Conclusion: How You Can Make a Difference
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