The Viability of Employee-Owned Firms: Evidence from France
Type of Work
Article
Date
1-1992
Journal Title
Industrial and Labor Relations Review
Journal ISSN
0019-7939
Journal Volume
45
Journal Issue
2
First Page
323
Last Page
338
DOI
10.1177%2F001979399204500209
Abstract
This study examines data on French producer cooperatives for the years 1970-79 to test the widely accepted theoretical prediction that employee-owned firms either will fail as commercial undertakings or degenerate into capitalist firms as the proportion of hired workers who are not members of the cooperative firm increases. Contrary to this prediction, the authors find a high rate of survival among the producer cooperatives studied, with many cooperatives still healthy after fifty years of operation, and they find no evidence of degeneration--either in terms of the proportion of hired workers, productivity, profitability, or capital-intensity. The findings do, however, suggest that the firms' financial structure became increasingly inefficient with age.
Citation Information
Estrin, Saul and Jones, Derek C., "The Viability of Employee-Owned Firms: Evidence from France" (1992). Hamilton Digital Commons.
https://digitalcommons.hamilton.edu/articles/308
Hamilton Areas of Study
Economics
Notes
JEL Classification: J54