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South Africa: Employee-share Ownership a Boost to Productivity
Source: Productivity SA Newsletter
Source Date: Friday, November 21, 2014
Focus: ICT for MDGs
Country: South Africa
Created: Nov 21, 2014

Employee ownership is a form of employee financial participation that confers on employees the right to share in the wealth of the company and, in theory at least, the right to exercise some degree of control over company affairs.
Employee ownership is identified as a means of enhancing enterprise performance through promoting worker productivity. The theoretical basis for this rationale is generally located in agency theory. In the corporate governance context, agency theory has highlighted the ‘corporate governance problem’ arising out of the separation between ‘ownership’ and ‘control’.
Shareholders and managers may have divergent interests and shareholders may find it difficult and expensive to monitor management, particularly where they hold small stakes in many different firms. Employee ownership is one such incentive mechanism by which to reduce costs to the company through more closely aligning the interests of employees with those of other stakeholders in the company.
There is a range of industrial relations or human resource management rationales for employee share ownership. Employee ownership is viewed by some as a potential means of enhancing industrial democracy or of bringing the employee into corporate governance. It is a means of increasing employee understanding of how the company for which they work operates and, more broadly, of ‘absorbing the principles on which the economy of the country is run’.
Therefore, it is seen as a means of facilitating labour-management cooperation through breaking down the ‘them’ and ‘us’ mentality. It can substitute for salary or wages when business is not performing well. Five key factors or lessons that can be learned to ensure optimal implementation of employee-share ownership:
Lesson one: For any employee owned company to reach its potential, it is important to have everyone at the company, regardless of position or rank, committed to creating an ownership culture among employee’s owners. An ownership culture is formed in a participatory, empowered environment, where employee input is based trust and knowledge.
Lesson two: Successful employee owned companies have strong commitment.
Lesson three: Whether a business is employee owned, singularly owned, publicly owned or owned by a group, employee ownership does not alter an external environment.
Lesson four: Creating employee ownership in a distressed company through lower pay, owner benefits, and other so called ‘wage concession’ in exchange for ownership may not work out.
Lesson five: Research has demonstrated that more often than not, employee ownership has succeeded in privately owned companies with less than 1000 employees.
Employee ownership has not yet established a track record of success by large, public employers that are majority-owned by the employees.
An Employee Share Ownership Program promotes a culture of ownership. When employees invest in their company, they often find renewed purpose in the work at hand, and have a greater incentive to ensure their organisation’s overall success. In addition to boosting productivity, Employee Share Ownership Program can inspire a sense of pride among employees – in their company and in their colleagues, now fellow owners.
To achieve higher productivity in this country, there is a need for buy-in from everyone. All stakeholders need to be consulted and involved and understand that the benefits of increased productivity devolve to all South African citizens. Government, business and organised labour should find ways to ensure that productivity gains can be shared by all. As the revered world icon, Nelson Mandela, said I have faith in human progress, and productivity in all spheres of human activity is certainly at the heart of that progress.”
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