种族和性别财富公平和员工持股的作用

Jenny Weissbourd, Maureen Conway, J. Klein, Yoo-Shin Chang, D. Kruse, Melissa A Hoover, Todd Leverette, Julian McKinley, Zen Trenholm
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文讨论了系统性不平等与财富差距之间的关系,并主张扩大员工股份所有权作为解决种族和性别收入和财富鸿沟的策略。它针对包括政策制定者、慈善领袖和社会投资者在内的不同行为者,提出了一套政策建议和实践理念,旨在促进对员工持股的更广泛理解,并建立关键组织支持员工持股企业的能力。设计/方法/方法本文利用的数据表明,员工持股计划(ESOPs)在工作质量、经济稳定和财富积累方面取得了积极成果,并获得了对ESOPs的广泛政治支持。研究结果表明,员工持股有助于提高工作质量,解决种族和性别收入和财富差距问题。它认为,既有公众的支持,也有一系列不同的战略可以实施,以扩大对不同形式的员工股权的认识和获取。研究局限/启示需要对员工持股的其他形式(除了员工持股计划)进行进一步的研究,以加深对每种形式如何在解决种族和性别财富不平等方面发挥作用的理解。本文承认,尽管员工持股有可能缓解种族和性别财富差距,但还需要采取额外的同步策略来解决一系列系统性障碍,这些障碍不成比例地限制了女性和有色人种参与员工持股计划。政策制定者正在积极寻求新的建议,而慈善领袖、社会投资者和其他人也渴望建立对员工持股模式的认识和理解,并发展必要的机构能力,以支持强大的员工持股企业。本文直接回应了这些需求,并有助于更广泛的合作努力,以推广支持经济复苏的员工股权政策和做法,并为更公平、更有弹性的经济奠定基础。社会影响政策制定者和公众尚未很好地理解员工持股战略,但它与许多人最关心的结果联系在一起,并支持这些结果,包括增加地方所有权和促进地方经济,帮助小企业主以保留当地就业和企业的方式退休,加强工作质量和劳动力发展。解决种族不平等和经济不平等问题,为工人提供更大的发言权和代理权。本文试图将员工所有权与这些高优先级问题联系起来,并支持一系列组织实施政策和实践解决方案的努力。原创性/价值本文满足了在种族和性别的基础上对员工持股与财富不平等之间关系的最新研究进行汇总的确定需求。它还及时提出了一个论点,即在我们从COVID-19大流行中重建的过程中,员工所有权战略可以在应对社区和工人(特别是女工和有色人种工人)面临的挑战方面发挥重要作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Race and gender wealth equity and the role of employee share ownership
PurposeThe paper discusses the relationship between systemic inequity and wealth disparity and advocates for expanding employee share ownership as a strategy to address divides in income and wealth by race and gender. It targets diverse actors including policymakers, philanthropic leaders and social investors and presents a set of policy proposals and practice ideas that seek to advance a broader understanding of employee share ownership and build the capacity of key organizations to support employee-owned businesses.Design/methodology/approachThis paper draws on data indicating positive outcomes from employee share ownership programs (ESOPs) related to job quality, economic stability and wealth-building, as well as widespread political support for ESOPs.FindingsThis paper suggests that employee share ownership can help to strengthen job quality and address race and gender income and wealth gaps. It argues that there is both public support and a range of different strategies actors can implement to expand awareness and access to different forms of employee share ownership.Research limitations/implicationsAdditional research focused on other forms of employee share ownership (beyond ESOPs) is needed to deepen understanding of how each form can play a role in addressing racial and gender wealth inequities. The paper acknowledges that despite the potential of employee share ownership to mitigate racial and gender wealth gaps, additional simultaneous strategies are required to address the range of systemic barriers that have disproportionately limited women and people of color's participation in ESOPs.Practical implicationsPolicymakers are actively seeking new proposals, while philanthropic leaders, social investors and others are also eager to build awareness and understanding of employee ownership models and develop the institutional capacity necessary to support strong employee-owned businesses. This paper directly responds to these needs and contributes to a broader collaborative effort to spread employee share ownership policies and practices that support economic recovery and lay the foundation for a more equitable and resilient economy.Social implicationsEmployee share ownership is not yet a strategy that is well understood among policymakers and the public, but it connects to and supports outcomes that are top of mind for many, including increasing local ownership and bolstering local economies, helping small business owners retire in ways that preserve local jobs and businesses, strengthening job quality and workforce development, addressing racial inequity and economic inequality and providing workers greater voice and agency. This paper seeks to connect employee ownership to these high-priority issues and support efforts by a range of organizations to implement policy and practice solutions.Originality/valueThis paper fulfills an identified need to aggregate recent research on the relationship between employee share ownership and wealth inequities on the basis of race and gender. It also offers a timely argument that employee ownership strategies can play an important role in responding to the challenges facing communities and workers – particularly women workers and workers of color – as we rebuild from the COVID-19 pandemic.
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