Illustration: Lucy Jones
On May 8, 2019, Steven Pearlstein, Heidi Shierholz, James P Ziliak, Lane Kenworthy, Oren Cass, Robert Doar, Isabel Sawhill and Abigail Wozniak, Nell Abernathy, Darrick Hamilton and Julie Marietta Morgan write on The Guardian:
All workers need to share in their company’s success
Steven Pearlstein
Any defense of the extravagant compensation for corporate executives inevitably boils down to two points: first, it’s fair because it’s tied directly to increased profits and, second, because it provides necessary incentive for these highly talented people to share their excellence and make the often tough decisions necessary to keep their companies competitive.
Gary Reber Comments:
The authors provide some policy ideas worth serious consideration. Throughout, the focus is on improving the financial condition of workers, while it should be obvious that the wealthy are wealthy because they OWN wealth-creating, income-producing productive capital assets and the masses of Americans are propertyless. Only two authors mention, fleetingly in a phrase, that workers should share in the success of their companies in the form of “company-wide” profit sharing mechanisms. But NONE mention, nor advocate for workers and citizens as a class becoming owners of companies, and thus their underlying productive non-human capital assets, which is the source of increasing productivity.
To gain an appreciation of the significance of this economic reality, one must view how productivity is attained. Fundamentally, economic value is created through human and non-human contributions. In simple terms, there are two independent factors of production: humans (labor workers who contribute manual, intellectual, creative and entrepreneurial work) and non-human physical capital (productive land; structures; infrastructure; tools; machines; robotics; computer processing and apps; artificial intelligence, certain intangibles that have the characteristics of property, such as patents and trade or firm names the like which are owned by people individually or in association with others).
Viewed through this binary lens one should have an appreciation that throughout human history “tools” have been created and developed by humans to reduce toil, enable otherwise impossible production, create new highly automated industries, and significantly change the way in which goods, products, and services are produced from labor intensive to capital intensive — the core function of technological invention and innovation.
Technological change makes tools, machines, structures, and processes ever more productive while leaving human productiveness largely unchanged (our human abilities are limited by physical strength and brain power — and relatively constant). Industries are always changing, evolving and innovating. The result is that primary distribution through the free-market economy, whose distributive principle is “to each according to his production,” delivers progressively more market-sourced income to capital owners and progressively less to workers who make their contribution through labor.
Most changes in the productive capacity of the world since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution can be attributed to technological improvements in our capital assets, and a relatively diminishing proportion to human labor. Furthermore, capital does not “enhance” labor productivity (labor’s ability to produce economic goods, products and services). In fact, the opposite is true. It makes many forms of labor unnecessary. Because of this undeniable fact, free-market forces no longer establish the value of labor. Instead, the price of labor is artificially elevated by government through minimum wage legislation, overtime laws, collective bargaining legislation, tax credit subsidies or by government employment and government subsidization of private employment solely to increase consumer income.
When the “tools” of capital owners replace labor workers (non-capital owners) as the principal suppliers of products and services, labor employment alone becomes inadequate. Thus, under the present unjust system, we are left with government policies that redistribute income in one form or another. And that is precisely the essence of the solutions, in one form or another, presented by the authors of this multi-part article.
What we MUST do, because the reality is that tectonic shifts in the technologies of production are producing productive capital that is increasingly the source of the world’s economic growth, is ensure, through the reform of the system, that productive capital become the source of added property ownership incomes for all. This is the logical solution that is missed on the part of these authors and others when one acknowledges the following: if both labor and capital are independent factors of production, and if capital’s proportionate contributions are increasing relative to that of labor, then equality of opportunity and economic justice demands that the right to property (and access to the means of acquiring and possessing property) must in justice be extended to all. Yet, sadly, the American people and its leaders still pretend to believe that labor is becoming more productive and couch all policy directions in the name of job creation, wage increases, and better benefits that improve the financial conditions of workers. Americans ignore the necessity to broaden personal ownership of wealth-creating, income-producing capital assets simultaneously with the growth of the economy.
If we can agree on the necessity to broaden personal ownership of productive capital, then should we not be focusing on solutions that will accomplish this objective to fix America’s broken economic system?
That has been what I and a few others have focused on for over 50 years. A requirement of ANY solution that systematically broadens personal ownership of productive capital simultaneously with the growth of the economy is freeing economic growth from the slavery of past savings.
Significantly though, no matter how much labor is necessary or unnecessary in the building of a future democratic growth economy, it is imperative that the issue of concentrated capital ownership is addressed and abated, and policies are enacted to simultaneously create new capital owners of the corporations growing the economy, both established and viable start-ups using insured, interest-free capital credit, repayable solely with the earnings of the investments and without the requirement of past savings. Capital credit insurance would replace past savings credit risk security.
In such a democratic growth economy, the ownership of productive capital assets would be spread more broadly as the economy grows, without taking anything away from the 1 to 10 percent (until an inheritance transfer tax kicks in at death) who now own 50 to 90 percent of the existing corporate capital asset wealth. Instead, the ownership pie would desirably get much bigger and their percentage of the total ownership would decrease, as ownership gets broader and broader, benefiting EVERY citizen (children, women and men), including the traditionally disenfranchised poor and working and middle class. EVERY citizen would become a full-voting capital asset owner in the corporations growing the economy, effectively enabling operating decisions to be made from the bottom up, eliminating the lopsided distribution of profits, and creating democratic control. Thus, productive capital income, from full corporate earnings dividend payouts, would be distributed more broadly and the demand for goods, products, and services would be distributed more broadly from the earnings of capital and result in the sustentation of consumer demand, which will promote and support environmentally responsible economic growth and more profitable and responsible enterprises. That also means that society can profitably employ unused productive capacity and invest in more “green,” environmentally productive and enhanced productive capacity to service the demands of an environmentally responsible growth economy. As a result, our business corporations would be enabled to operate more efficiency and competitively, while broadening wealth-creating,income-producing capital ownership participation, creating new capital owners and jobs resulting from the growth spiral, and “customers with money” to support the goods, products, and services being produced.
To learn about how this future economy that can support general affluence for EVERY citizen, see “Economic Democracy And Binary Economics: Solutions For A Troubled Nation and Economy” at http://www.foreconomicjustice.org/?p=11.
See the Agenda of The JUST Third WAY Movement (also known as “Economic Personalism”) at http://foreconomicjustice.org/?p=5797, http://www.cesj.org/resources/articles-index/the-just-third-way-basic-principles-of-economic-and-social-justice-by-norman-g-kurland/ and http://www.cesj.org/resources/articles-index/the-just-third-way-a-new-vision-for-providing-hope-justice-and-economic-empowerment/.
See Monetary Justice at http://capitalhomestead.org/page/monetary-justice.
See the proposed Capital Homestead Act (aka Economic Democracy Act and Economic Empowerment Act) at http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/, http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/capital-homestead-act-a-plan-for-getting-ownership-income-and-power-to-every-citizen/, http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/capital-homestead-act-summary/ and http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/ch-vehicles/. And The Capital Homestead Act brochure, pdf print version at http://www.cesj.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/C-CHAflyer_1018101.pdf and Capital Homestead Accounts (CHAs) at http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/ch-vehicles/capital-homestead-accounts-chas/