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Democratic Primaries

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Uncle Joe

(66,086 posts)
Mon Oct 14, 2019, 11:56 AM Oct 2019

Bernie Sanders's plan to reshape corporate America, explained [View all]



(snip)

“This is the most ambitious plan on corporate ownership ever put out by a presidential candidate,” Peter Gowan, with the Democracy Collaborative, an economic inequality-focused research institution, said. “[This is] giving real bones to Sanders’ vision of democratic socialism.”

(snip)

The centerpiece of Sanders’s Corporate Accountability Plan is a proposal to shift power to workers by requiring all large companies — those with at least $100 million in annual revenue, and all publicly traded companies — to come under partial employee-ownership.

The idea is to require large companies to contribute 2 percent of their stocks annually to an employee-controlled fund until workers control 20 percent of the company, and then pay out the dividends to those workers. The campaign estimates the plan would impact 56 million workers at more than 22,000 companies in the United States.

(snip)

Overall, this proposal could have enormous impact on the current makeup of the US economy. A Rutgers University study on employee ownership found that employee stock ownership plans have been successful in increasing workers’ assets and in closing racial and gender wealth gaps in the workplace. And research from countries like Germany, which have codetermination policies in place, have much higher levels of pay equality, and have seen positive results on productivity and innovation.

(snip)

https://www.vox.com/2019/10/14/20912221/bernie-sanders-corporate-accountability-ftc-merger-tax



This is a good read.
If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Undecided
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