Employee Participation in Profit and Ownership – Impact on Work Efficiency

Authors

  • Maciej Kozłowski University of Łódź, Faculty of Economics and Sociology, Department of Institutional Economics

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2478/cer-2013-0005

Abstract

In the vast theoretical literature, a number of arguments have been put forward in favor of employee financial participation schemes. Although traditionally the main arguments were spurred by objectives such as greater equality in the distribution of income and wealth and improving relations between workers and capitalist owners, today employee financial participation schemes are considered as part of industrial relations based on innovative managerial strategies and more flexible remuneration policies, which should ultimately result in increased enterprise efficiency. Because share ownership and profit sharing schemes are undoubtedly the most popular schemes, emphasis has been put on showing the multidimensional relationships between employee financial ownership and economic results, as well as on proving that the relationship between employee ownership and productivity involves an inherently complex interaction. The purpose of this paper is to present selected views and attitudes toward the relationship between employee participation and company results. The theoretical view and empirical research both indicate that after many years of conducting empirical research on the benefits resulting from the implementation of financial participation plans, the information provided, almost entirely by reports, is not yet sufficient to make any unequivocal conclusions concerning the influence on the results (productivity) achieved by companies. Obtaining such a consensus is additionally hindered because of the lack of clear-cut data concerning the extent to which implemented participation schemes contribute to changes in financial results. In conclusion, both the previous theory as well as the research conducted so far do not convincingly explain the relationship between financial participation schemes and the results achieved owing to their implementation, which demonstrates that there is a need to conduct further research in this field. In this case any empirical approach should concentrate on qualitative, not quantitative research, the latter of which, although broad based, does not identify the above mentioned relationships precisely enough. Another conclusion that can be drawn is the necessity to conduct further research based on larger samples of companies, taking into account the specificity of their business and working environment. It seems that some other aspects should be also taken into consideration, such as the type of the financial participation scheme introduced, because this decision may also have an influence on future results. Research should begin a long time prior to the introduction of a scheme in the company, which would allow for making future comparisons and evaluations of the influence of a given scheme on productivity.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Biagioli M. and S. Curatolo (1999), Microeconomic determinants and effects of financial participation agreements: An empirical analysis of the large Italian firms of the engineering sector in the eighties and early nineties, Economic Analysis (2)2
Google Scholar

Black S.E. and L.M. Lynch (2001), How to compete: The impact of workplace practices and information technology on productivity, The Review of Economics and Statistics, (83)3
Google Scholar

Blasi J., M. Conte and D.L. Kruse (1996), Employee stock ownership and corporate performance among public companies, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 50(1)
Google Scholar

Blanchflower D.G., A.J. Oswald (1988), Profit-related pay: Prose discovered?, Economic Journal, (98)392
Google Scholar

Cable J. and N. Wilson (1989), Profit-sharing and productivity: An analysis of UK engineering firms, ʻEconomic Journal, (99)396
Google Scholar

Carstensen V., K. Gerlach and O. Hübler (1995), Profit sharing in German Firms, [in:] Friedrich Buttler, Wolfgang Franz, Ronald Schettkat, David Soskice (eds.), Institutional Frameworks and Labour Market Performance: Comparative Views on US and German Economies, Routledge, London and New York
Google Scholar

Cooke W.N. (1994), Employee participation programs, group-based incentives, and company performance: A union-nonunion comparison, Industrial & Labor Relations Review, (47)4
Google Scholar

Drago R. and J.S. Heywood (1995), The choice of payment Schemes: Australian establishment data, Industrial Relations, (34)4
Google Scholar

Estrin S., V. Pérotin, A. Robinson and N. Wilson (1999), Profit-sharing revisited: British and French experience compared, London Business School, International Labour Office, Bradford University and Leeds University Business School, mimeo, Leeds
Google Scholar

Fakhfakh F. and V. Pérotin (2002), France: Weitzman under State Paternalism?, [in:] Michelle Brown and John S. Heywood (eds.), Paying for Performance. An International Comparison, M.E. Sharpe, Armonk NY
Google Scholar

Fakhfakh F. (1998), Sharing schemes and productivity: An empirical analysis based on large French firms using production functions and frontiers, “Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory and Labor-Managed Firms”, vol. 6
Google Scholar

Freeman R.B. and E.P. Lazear (1995), An economic analysis of works councils, [in:] Joel Rogers and Wolfgang Streeck (eds.), Works Councils - Consultation, Representation, and Cooperation in Industrial Relations, National Bureau of Economic Research, Comparative Labor Markets Series, University of Chicago Press, Chicago
Google Scholar

Heywood J.S. and U. Jirjahn (2002), Payment systems, gender and industrial relations in Germany, Industrial Labor Relations Review, (56)1
Google Scholar

Jirjahn U. (2002), The German experience with performance pay, [in:] Michelle Brown and John S. Heywood (eds.), Paying for Performance. An International Comparison, M.E. Sharpe, Armonk NY, (German research)
Google Scholar

Jones D.C. and T. Kato (1995), The productivity effects of employee stock ownership plans and bonuses: Evidence from Japanese panel data, American Economic Review, (85)3
Google Scholar

Jones D.C. (1999), The nature and the effects of worker participation, employee ownership and profit sharing on economic performance: A review of empirical evidence for transitional economies, paper presented at the Conference on Democracy, Participation and Economic Development, Columbia University, April
Google Scholar

Kato T. and M. Morishima (2000), The nature, scope and effects of profit sharing in Japan: Evidence from new survey data, mimeo, Colgate University, New York
Google Scholar

Kato T. (2002), Financial participation and pay for performance in Japan, [in:] Michelle Brown and John S. Heywood (eds.), Paying for Performance. An International Comparison, M.E. Sharpe, Armonk NY, (Japanese research)
Google Scholar

Kruse D.L. and J.R. Blasi (1997), Employee ownership, employee attitudes and firm performance: A review of the evidence, [in:] DawidLewin, Daniel J.B. Mitchell and Mahmood A. Zaidi (eds.), The Human Resource Management Handbook, Part 1, JAI Press, Greenwich, CT, US, (American research)
Google Scholar

Kruse D.L. (1992), Profit sharing and productivity: Microeconomic evidence from the United States, Economic Journalʼ, (102)410
Google Scholar

Kruse D.L. (1993), Profit-Sharing: does it Make a Difference? The Productivity and Stability Effects of Employee Profit-Sharing Plans, W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, Kalamazoo, Michigan
Google Scholar

Long R.J. (2002), Performance pay in Canada, [in:] Michelle Brown and John S. Heywood (eds.), Paying for Performance. An International Comparison, M.E. Sharpe, Armonk NY, (Canadian research)
Google Scholar

Mathieu M. (2009), Annual Economic Survey Of Employee Ownership in European Countries 2008, European Federation of Employee Share Ownership, Brussels, May
Google Scholar

Möller I. (2000), Produktivitätswirkung von Mitarbeiterbeteiligung, ʻMitteilungenaus der Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschungʼ, InstitutfürArbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung, Nürnberg, (33)4
Google Scholar

OECD (1995), Profit Sharing in OECD Countries, ʻEmployment Outlookʼ, Paris, July
Google Scholar

Ohkusa Y. and F. Ohtake (1997), The productivity effects of information sharing, profit sharing and ESOPs, Journal of the Japanese and International Economics (11)3
Google Scholar

Osterman P. (1994), How common is workplace transformation and who adopts it?, Industrial and Labour Relations Review, (47)
Google Scholar

Pendleton A. (1997), Characteristics of workplaces with financial participation: Evidence from the Workplace Industrial Relations Survey, Industrial Relations Journal, (28)2 (British research)
Google Scholar

Pérotin V. and A. Robinson (2000), Employee participation and equal opportunities practices: Productivity effects and potential complementarities, British Journal of Industrial Relations, (38)4
Google Scholar

Pérotin V. and A. Robinson (2002), Employee Participation in Profit and Ownership: A Review of the Issues and Evidence, Leeds University Business School, Maurice Keyworth Building, The University of Leeds, Leeds, December
Google Scholar

Pérotin V. and A. Robinson (1998), Profit-sharing and productivity: Evidence from Britain, France, Germany and Italy, Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory and Labor-Managed Firms, vol. 6
Google Scholar

Robinson A. and N. Wilson (2001), Employee participation, ownership and productivity: An empirical re-appraisal, Leeds University Business School, mimeo, Leeds
Google Scholar

Shields J. (2002), Performance related pay in Australia, [in:] Michelle Brown and John S. Heywood (eds.), Paying for Performance. An International Comparison, M.E. Sharpe,(Australian research), ch. 7
Google Scholar

Uvalić M. and D. Vaughan-Whitehead (eds.) (1997), Privatisation Surprises in Transition Economies: Employee-Ownership in Central and Eastern Europe, Edward Elgar/International Labour Organisation, Cheltenham (UK) and Geneva (Switzerland)
Google Scholar

Wadhwani S. and M. Wall (1990), The effects of profit sharing on employment, wages, stock returns and productivity: Evidence from UK micro-data, ʻEconomic Journal, Vol. 100, No. 399, March
Google Scholar

Weitzman M.L. (1984), The Share Economy, Harvard University Press, MA, Cambridge
Google Scholar

Downloads

Published

2013-04-30

How to Cite

Kozłowski, M. (2013). Employee Participation in Profit and Ownership – Impact on Work Efficiency. Comparative Economic Research. Central and Eastern Europe, 16(1), 71–86. https://doi.org/10.2478/cer-2013-0005

Issue

Section

Articles