Learn Before
John Lewis Partnership as a Worker-Owned Cooperative
The John Lewis Partnership, a major British retailer, is a prominent example of a worker-owned cooperative. Since 1950, the company has been held in trust for its employees, who are all considered 'partners'. This partnership structure includes a significant degree of worker participation in governance, with employee councils electing three of the seven members of the company's board. The firm is also known for its generous employee benefits, such as pensions and paid sabbaticals, and a profit-sharing system. Annually, after retaining a portion of profits for investment, the company distributes the remainder as a bonus to partners, typically amounting to 10-20% of their salary. This model has historically contributed to the company's long-term success and profitability, though it faced significant financial pressure during the COVID-19 pandemic.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
The Economy 1.0 @ CORE Econ
Ch.1 The Capitalist Revolution - The Economy 1.0 @ CORE Econ
Economics
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
John Lewis Partnership as a Worker-Owned Cooperative
Hierarchical Structure of Worker-Owned Cooperatives
Reduced Need for Supervision in Worker-Owned Cooperatives
Reduced Wage Inequality in Worker-Owned Cooperatives
Employment Stability in Worker-Owned Cooperatives during Recessions
Funding Challenges for Worker-Owned Cooperatives
Limited Dominance of Worker Cooperatives
Successful Competition of US Plywood Worker Cooperatives
Worker Participation: Lessons from the Worker Co-ops of the Pacific Northwest (Book)
Comparing Business Responses to an Economic Downturn
A group of software developers is deciding whether to structure their new business as a conventional, investor-owned firm or as a worker-owned cooperative. Which of the following statements best distinguishes a likely operational outcome of choosing the cooperative model over the conventional one?
Barriers to the Proliferation of Employee-Owned Businesses
In a business where the employees are also the collective owners of the company's assets and share in its income, which statement accurately describes the typical relationship between the workers and the management?
Supervisory Structures in Employee-Owned Firms
When comparing the compensation structures of a business where employees are the collective owners and a conventional firm owned by external investors, which of the following outcomes is most likely, and what is the underlying reason for this difference?
Evaluating the Worker-Owned Cooperative Model
A business is structured such that its employees are also its collective owners, sharing in the income and jointly governing the enterprise. Based on common operational patterns of such businesses, which of the following outcomes would be the LEAST expected?
When comparing a worker-owned cooperative to a conventional firm, which of the following represents the most fundamental trade-off inherent in the cooperative model's structure?
A primary reason that businesses where employees are also the collective owners are less common than conventionally-owned firms is that their typically flat, non-hierarchical structure makes them inefficient for large-scale operations.
Learn After
Applying a Partnership Model to Business Challenges
A key feature of the John Lewis Partnership is its profit-sharing system, where a portion of annual profits is distributed to all employees (known as 'partners'). From an economic perspective, what is the most direct consequence of this specific feature on the behavior of the partners?
Strategic Decision-Making in a Cooperative Model
Navigating Financial Hardship in a Partnership Model
Match each feature of the John Lewis Partnership's business model with its primary economic or organizational implication.
In a business structure where the company is held in trust for its employees (or 'partners'), the board of directors' primary legal and financial duty is to maximize the company's stock price for external shareholders.
A large retail company is structured as a trust for its employees, who are called 'partners'. These partners share in the annual profits and elect several members to the company's main board. The company is considering a major long-term investment that will significantly reduce the annual profit-sharing bonus for the next three years but is projected to secure the company's future and lead to higher profits thereafter. Which of the following statements best analyzes the likely internal dynamic when this proposal is considered?
Duality of Profit-Sharing Incentives
Evaluating a Transition to a Worker-Owned Model
A large retail company is structured as a trust for its employees, who are called 'partners'. These partners elect several members to the company's main governing board. The board is considering adopting a new inventory management system that uses advanced automation. This system is projected to significantly increase long-term profitability and partner bonuses but will also make the roles of 15% of the current warehouse staff redundant. How would this company's governance structure most likely influence the final decision compared to a company owned exclusively by external shareholders?