A
Nation of Owners (Part 2)
The
Federal Model
Each responsible citizen in the
United States has a vote, but each citizen doesn’t vote on every issue, every
bill, every executive decision, every Supreme Court ruling. Such a voting
system would create political and social gridlock. Instead, we elect representatives,
then they vote for us, make executive decisions, and appoint judges and other
government officials. If we don’t like their voting record, we don’t reelect
them. It’s not true democracy, but it is a workable compromise between
potential anarchy and the imposed order of arbitrary authority.
We are, at least in theory, a
democratic republic. And economic democratic republics would follow the
same principles. Equal ownership, equal voice, equal representation. To prevent
the abuses of power and position that we see in Congress, we would have to
designate a limited term for those elected as managers within corporations and
other organizations. Four or five years would be sufficient. And after a
manager’s administrative term was completed, he or she would then return to the
regular workforce. This would eliminate the professional managerial class and
would prevent the politicizing of organizational leadership, which is exactly
what has happened to American government on the national level.
The advantages of this form of
economic organization would be similar to those created in government by the
U.S. Constitution. These advantages were laid out by Alexander Hamilton, James
Madison, and John Jay in The Federalist Papers, which were arguments
made in support of our particular form of constitutional government. Among
these advantages were the following.
Federalism
The U.S. government represents a
federation of states. The states retain some power and autonomy, but are bound
into a greater whole. The creation of this federation was a move toward
centralization, the intent being to overcome the major weak point of the
Articles of Confederation—dissension among the states. The states needed to be
strong, to be unified in a larger cause, and only a strong central government
could achieve those ends. This move, of course, was also based on military,
security, and commercial concerns.
In most businesses today,
however, the movement would have to be in the opposite direction, toward
decentralization, since most organizations are authoritarian in nature and
dominated by strong central control. Departments or divisions, acting much as
states do in the federal government, would retain certain powers and perform
certain roles. Limited, universal ownership, however, would create strong
incentives toward smaller, community-oriented businesses, and away from
national or international conglomerates. There would be little purpose in or
justification for large, nonregional businesses under such an ownership
arrangement, and great impetus to break down today’s conglomerates into
regional- or community-sized pieces that focused on one particular product or a
set of related products. Some companies might divide up into several small,
independent, department-sized groups.
Checks and Balances
Our federal government, as
established in the Constitution, is a brilliant plan for preserving political
freedom and democracy by preventing one individual or a segment of government
from gaining too much power. Power is balanced in at least four ways: between
the states and the federal government, between the two houses of Congress,
among the three branches of the federal government, and between the people and
their elected leaders. It is not my purpose here to explore all the
ramifications of these governmental checks and balances, only to say that a
similar system would need to be established in large economic institutions.
In the vast majority of today’s
businesses, large and small, the owner or CEO or perhaps a small group of
leaders hold total power. They function more or less as dictators, exercising
the legislative (policy-making), the executive (administrative), and the
judicial (decision-rendering) powers in the organization. They can do just
about what they want to, with no internal checks and balances, for only certain
(usually inadequate) external restraints prevent them from abusing the awesome
power that is theirs. Separating the executive, legislative, and judicial
powers in businesses makes perfect sense. It is the best way to prevent the
abuse of authority, even if that authority is granted by the employees
themselves through elected management.
Popular Sovereignty
Because in the United States the
people are sovereign, their will influences all branches of government. Supposedly,
the only tyranny possible under such a government would be the tyranny of the
majority, which worried Tocqueville.
Time, however, has proved this
supposition wrong. The tyranny of the majority is not, in fact, the only
tyranny possible in America. Our political system has been reshaped over time
so that the wealthy and influential can exert a form of tyranny. This
oppression will be with us until we accept certain types of political and
economic reform. But tyranny of the majority is a very real thing in America.
And, ultimately, it has but one check: the virtue of the people.
If the majority is wise and moral
and virtuous in its selection of leaders, the potential tyranny of the majority
will be of no consequence. The danger comes only when the majority forsakes its
virtue. The Founders were well aware of this, but they had enough confidence in
mankind to try this experiment anyway. Said Madison:
I go on this great
republican principle, that the people will have virtue and intelligence to
select men of virtue and wisdom. Is there no virtue among us? If there be not,
we are in a wretched situation. No theoretical checks, no form of government
can render us secure. To suppose that any form of government will secure
liberty or happiness without any virtue in the people is a chimerical idea. If
there be sufficient virtue and intelligence in the community, it will be
exercised in the selection of these men; so that we do not depend on their
virtue, or put confidence in our rules, but in the people who are to choose
them.1
The Founders quite clearly
trusted the overall virtue of the people regarding the selection of political
leaders. And I believe their confidence was well placed, for even though times
have changed and our choice of political leaders is regrettably limited by
money and influence, we still scrutinize these candidates through the lens of a
morality that no longer governs our own lives. We expect (even demand) of our
elected leaders standards of morality and virtue that we do not apply even to
ourselves. The day may come when the majority totally loses its sense of virtue
and surrenders to outright depravity, but sufficient moral feeling has survived
to prevent the tyranny Tocqueville feared. [Okay,
I have to insert a comment here. This may have been true in 1995, when this
book was published, but I would argue that we have reached the point where the
majority has lost its sense of virtue (at least the majority as represented in
the Electoral College). The fact that America has elected the most corrupt
president in its history, a completely amoral man who embodies everything the
Founders tried to prevent, says something about where at least one of our
political parties has gone. In 1995, I was pretty sure something like our
current mess would never happen. Where we go from here will tell us who we are
as a nation. I certainly hope for a strong reaction against the corruption of
the Trump administration that has also infected the Republican Congress. Time
will tell.]
If we organize our economic institutions
according to the principles set forth in the Constitution, they would be
subject to the same threat of tyranny from the majority. But this threat is
insignificant next to the actual tyranny we see in our present authoritarian
organizations. What this system would remove from our economic institutions is
the ignorant body of employees that is willfully blind to injustice, pollution,
dishonesty, and unfair business practices. No longer would there be powerless
employees who say, “Hey, I didn’t know. I just do my job and don’t ask
questions. I have no influence over what management does.”
Representation
The leaders we elect after
examining them under the media microscope are our representatives in
government. They speak and act for us. The president of the United States
executes the public will; the legislature enacts laws through the authority
given it by the people; the Supreme Court acts for the people in determining
whether laws (and decisions of lower courts) are in harmony with the guiding principles
set forth in the Constitution. None of these branches of government, however,
pleases everybody. Sometimes they don’t please the majority. How is this
possible?
Regardless of whether they were
elected by popular vote or appointed by an elected official, these individuals
have their own interpretations of right and wrong, good and bad, just and
unjust. Representing a diverse populace is no easy matter. Sometimes special
interests, because they have purchased influence (or gained it some other way),
sway public representatives away from the majority position. Sometimes
representatives, because of individual conscience, vote or act contrary to the
will of their constituents. Sometimes there are several options, and pursuing
even the most popular one still leaves 75 percent of the people dissatisfied.
Representation, in short, is a compromise between the tyranny of the majority
and the tyranny of individual rulers. It is the most necessary element of a
republic.
In businesses this element would
also be necessary in order to control the chaos into which a purely democratic
workplace would inevitably fall. Every worker can’t have a voice in every
decision, nor would he or she want to. That would be highly inefficient. But
every worker would need a voice in the overall management of the enterprise and
a knowledge of what is being done and why—because the workers would be the
owners. And they would exert the powers of that ownership not only in choosing
those who represent them, but also in establishing limits on the power of their
representatives.
These four features of our
democratic republic, established by the Constitution, should apply to any
organization comprising more than, say, fifty or so individuals. We must put
ownership back where it belongs—in the hands of the people—but we must also
avoid the chaos that a purely democratic system would spawn. The federal model
is a viable solution, a perhaps imperfect although workable compromise.
Business leaders have recognized
the benefits of giving employees at least the illusion of democracy, although
they generally give employees only a fraction of the voice they deserve. The
recent movement to permit employees to participate in ownership—from PepsiCo’s
“Share Power Plan” to Wendy’s stock options for employees—is commendable and is
gaining momentum in the United States. Much of this growth in employee
ownership has come through employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs), now in place
at some eleven thousand companies, involving 11.5 million employees (13 percent
of the civilian workforce). Employees now own more than $120 billion in their
own companies’ stock, which though impressive represents only 3 percent of all
shares in U.S. firms.2
These plans are popular because
they (predictably) increase employee commitment and generate cash flow, but
they do not go far enough. Employee shareholding at limited or token levels
should not be mistaken for actual employee ownership. A business can never
become an economic “democratic republic” if most of the stock is held by either
a few powerful individuals or a multitude of distant, uninterested
shareholders. Authoritarianism with a democratic facade should not be confused
with republican democracy.
The
Conversion
If we are serious about
overcoming our nation’s deep problems, we must make sweeping fundamental
changes in our economic system, in both theory and practice, by bringing it
more in line with our political philosophy and our social ideals. Says Shann
Turnbull:
To minimize corruption
of all sorts, we need to decentralize power to the greatest extent possible so
as to maximize checks and balances. The most fundamental sources of power in
society arise from the ownership and control of land, enterprise and money. The
current ownership system was developed to serve the needs of past rulers who
sought absolute powers. As a result, there is no limit as to the extent and
value of property which any person can possess. New rules are needed to
decentralize the power of owning things—rules which follow the self-limiting
and self-regulating principles found in all living things.”3
Given the fact that capitalism as
we know it is both corrupt and rapidly deteriorating, we are faced with the
dilemma of how to get from our present system to one that is both more
equitable and more workable. This will not be an easy transition, for it will
involve the conversion of our present authoritarian organizations into
democratic institutions. Unfortunately, recognizing that we need to make this
transition is much easier than actually making it. How do you convert from a
system of either narrow, unlimited ownership or widely dispersed absentee
ownership to a system of limited, universal ownership?
A good argument can be built for
making this transition gradually, over a long period of time. If we were to try
to make this shift overnight, the consequences would likely be as horrible as
they are predictable. Suddenly abolishing our present system of ownership would
create a crisis far more perilous even than the Civil War, which arose from
abolishing a different, although related, form of ownership. It would be naive
to think that those who have accumulated vast amounts of money, property, and
power would simply yield to reason (or even newly enacted laws) and give up
these possessions without a fight. And I mean a literal fight, one in which the
odds would be stacked against change and democracy. It is not difficult to
imagine an actual civil war far more devastating than the one fought over
slavery.
How then can we make this
transition? Turnbull takes a shot at this dilemma. He proposes a system in
which ownership of corporations transfers gradually, at a rate of 5 percent per
year, from investors to stakeholders (employees, customers, suppliers). The
investor would reap profits for ten years, after which this gradual transfer
would begin. What this means is that thirty years after the initial capital
infusion, the investor would have no ownership in the enterprise. This, says
Turnbull, “would make corporate investment consistent with the time-limited
rights provided to all investors in intellectual property like patents and
copyright.”4 Mature corporations, according to Turnbull’s plan,
would then finance new technology and market growth by transferring parts of
their operations to spinoffs or “corporate offspring,” which would attract new
investors.
This system, although a far cry
better than our present heap of perpetual, monopolistic shareholding, is still
a system in which technology and economic growth would be supreme, and in which
capital would still be concentrated enough that individuals and groups could
invest heavily in new spinoffs or corporate offspring. Seen in the context of
these issues, Turnbull’s vision of economic change might be an intermediate
step that would pave the way for a system of complete equality and limited,
universal ownership.
The first question we should ask,
though, is this: Do we have thirty years to convert our present system into
Turnbull’s vision, which is still only a halfway house from our current
economic prison to the free society we would become? The answer, I fear, is
that we may not have even ten years. Time is not on our side in this matter.
__________________
1.
Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay [“Publius”], The Federalist
Papers (New York: Bantam Books [1787–88] 1982), xxi.
2.
Corey Rosen, “The Options Option: A New Approach to Employee Ownership.” Management
Review, December 3, 1991, 30.
3.
Shann Turnbull, “Transforming Society,” World
Business Academy Perspectives, winter 1992, 6.
4.
Turnbull, “Transforming Society,” 6.
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