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The primary reason that firms owned and operated by their employees are not the dominant business model is that they are inherently less efficient and less profitable than conventionally-owned firms.
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Social Science
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Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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Evaluating Support for Worker Cooperatives
Firms where employees are also the owners and collectively make key governance decisions are an established business model. Despite potential benefits like increased worker motivation, this model is not the dominant form of business organization in most economies. Which of the following presents the most significant economic challenge that helps explain this limited prevalence?
Cooperative Expansion Dilemma
Firms where employees are also the owners exist in many economies but are not the most common business structure. Match each theoretical challenge for this type of firm to the description that best explains how it can limit the firm's growth or prevalence.
The primary reason that firms owned and operated by their employees are not the dominant business model is that they are inherently less efficient and less profitable than conventionally-owned firms.
Challenges to Cooperative Proliferation
A group of skilled artisans decides to form a business where they are all equal owners and decision-makers. Arrange the following challenges they are likely to face in the logical order they would typically encounter them, from the initial startup phase to attempting significant expansion.
A significant barrier to the growth of firms owned by their employees is their limited ability to raise external ______, since they cannot sell ownership stakes to non-employee investors.
Advising on a Business Succession Plan
Evaluating the Viability of the Worker Cooperative Model
Funding Challenges for Worker-Owned Cooperatives