Richard D. Wolff, a Marxist economist, wrote in his recent books that capitalism has failed, and that it is necessary to replace for-profit corporations as we know them with what he calls worker self-directed enterprises.
But for-profit corporations aren’t going to go away, even if—which remains to be seen—worker-owned enterprises offer a better alternative.
If economic democracy is the only means by which workers can keep the value of what they produce, then it is going to be necessary to reform existing corporate structures.
The USA needs legislation to curb abuses in corporate management, such as leverage buyouts, in which slick financial operators can gain control of a company with borrowed money and then milk it for their own benefit, regardless of its impact on the company. We need enforcement of anti-trust laws and prosecution of corporate and financial fraud.
Beyond that, the USA needs to build up labor unions as a countervailing power. Congress should enact the Employee Free Choice Act, aka Card Check, in which employees get the right to bargain collectively when a majority sign up to join a union. It should repeal or reform the Taft-Hartley Act and Landrum Griffin Act.
But all of this falls short of true economic democracy. True economic democracy would mean something like Germany’s co-determination system, in which employees of firms are represented on the board of directors. I think this should be required of all companies whose stock is publicly traded. If an entrepreneur doesn’t want to share control of a company, then don’t sell its shares on the open market.
Economic democracy also would mean letting workers share in day-to-day management of the company, along the lines suggested by W. Edwards Deming. Knowledge in any institution is widely distributed. No small group has a monopoly on useful information. I think a company will be better managed when workers and managers have the same information available.
Banking and finance are a separate issue. There can be no economic democracy when financiers have a veto over democratic decisions. Banks should be regulated utilities. Bankers should be servants of the people, not masters of the universe.
When and if these things can be achieved, there will be a favorable environment for Wolff’s worker-self-directed enterprises. The government would give them the same kind of support across the board that rural electric co-ops got in the 1930s and 1940s. Otherwise, probably not.