|
COG
|
EOtrans Discussion |
|||||||||
| |
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: Employee Ownership in Multinationals
>X-Originating-IP: [24.4.252.105] >From: "Don Ward" <donrward@hotmail.com> >To: cclem@kent.edu >Subject: Re: Employee Ownership in Multinationals >Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 14:09:17 GMT >X-OriginalArrivalTime: 20 Sep 2000 14:09:18.0074 (UTC) FILETIME=[5D7285A0:01C0230C] > >Steve: For some time I have liked the idea of bring multinationals who >believe in employee ownership to the table. David Wheatcroft and I have >talked about what Wal Mart is doing in England. ie distributing stock to its >employees there. A retailing multinational like WalMart seems a natural for >another reason. WalMart wants to be the biggest retail chain in the world. >The only realistic way to do that is to have customers with disposable >incomes. Unless their government enriches them, as an inducement to get >WalMart to that country, the only way potential customers can get money >legally is through profitable businesses or other enterprises which pay a >good wage and hopefully provide some sort of stock owning opportunity >including ownership of the enterprise. > >When I worked, my company was a big WalMart supplier. We were employee owned >and I think WalMart only sold or gave stock to employees. However they were >big on promoting employee involvment and employee behavior descriptive of >ownership. I used to occasionally borrow an idea from them. > >If a WalMart would get behind the ownership idea world wide and give >supplier preference to those international suppliers who are employee owned, >they might give a giant leap to this whole discussion. Companies kill >figuratively to be a Wal Mart supplier. An employee owned company is not the >worst condition to have to meet to be a WalMart suppliier. A supplier can >become very profitable just getting the crumbs off the WalMart table. This >does not solve the problem of governments who are privatizing various >departments and functions, except that employees of those organizations are >also potential WalMart customers and if a WalMart were to lend its expertise >in training the organization in how to behave profitably who knows how many >new stores it could open for them. Best of all the employees who work for >WalMart would become owners, assuming WalMart did what it did in England. > >Note: I am not or have any interest in personally owning any retailing >stock. I have had this idea for several months and now seemed the ideal time >to open it up. There are downside risks to being a WalMart supplier, as they >jockey orders to meet changes in customer demand or reduce in store >inventories at the end of a quarter. Others may decrie the impact that a >WalMart has on the mom and pop economy. The Brits can attest to that. >However, this is the 21st century and globalization is now a way of life. > >I will leave it at that. > >Don Ward > > >>From: Steve Clem <cclem@kent.edu> >>To: eotrans@cog.kent.edu >>Subject: Employee Ownership in Multinationals >>Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2000 16:17:12 -0400 >> >>Former NCEO (National Center for Employee Ownership) staff member Veronica >>Manson, in a 1996 article (which may be found in the NCEO website library) >>titled "Globalizing Employee Ownership Plans for Multinational >>Corporations," found that the tendency toward the globalization of business >>has led to a globalization of the work force, the increased mobility of >>which has prompted many multinationals to try to maintain uniform >>employment policies in order to be fair to all of its employees, regardless >>of where they are stationed. This has apparently applied to employee >>ownership plans as well as to more basic benefits and other employment >>policies. >> >>In the U.S., where employee ownership is relatively well-established, ESOPs >>and other types of ownership programs have been generally shown to >>stabilize the workforce, lower turnover and motivate employees to "act like >>owners" when it comes to their own jobs and how they perform them. For a >>multinational to implement such a system in its facilities worldwide, >>however, runs into problems. Ms. Manson, in the article cited above, >>listed some features of a new model that may allow the extension of the >>benefits of employee ownership to employees working in overseas >>subsidiaries: >> >> 1. The international ESOP trust is established in a low- or >>no-tax country; >> 2. The foreign subsidiaries make periodic cash contributions >>to the trust to purchase >> stock of the parent company; >> 3. The shares are then allocated to individual employee >>accounts; >> 4. The company can set vesting schedules; >> 5. The contributions to the international ESOP trust can be >>determined according to >> a formula that takes into consideration the number of >>employees in that subsidiary or >> other factors. >> >>Any comments about its workability? Is this something that has potential? >>Going a bit further, how can we encourage more multinational corporations >>that employee ownership is a good thing for both them and their employees? >> >> >> > >_________________________________________________________________________ >Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com. > >Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at >http://profiles.msn.com. > >
|