Guido had a good post the other day commenting on how one of the main causes of the recent crisis was the change of ownership structure of the banks. For the majority of their history investment banks were partnerships with unlimited liability, compared to now when they are public listed, limited liability companies. As he puts it, flotation:
transferred all the risks from management partners to the firm’s shareholders who had no idea what risks were being taken. Now we have huge financial combines with managements incentivised to bet the shareholders capital big, win and get out with their annual bonus. If they lose, the shareholders lose, or if they lose really big the taxpayer eventually bails them out because they have retail banking High Street subsidiaries which democratic governments are terrified will be dragged under as well. Capitalism with the risk being taken with Other People’s Money has the same fundamental problem associated with socialist governments spending Other People’s Money. Why worry if it isn’t your money?
This is in keeping with one of the best books I have read this year, Alchemists of Loss by Kevin Dowd and Martin Hutchinson, who good things to say about the partnership model and how this kept banks ‘dull and respectable’. (a more in-depth review is on my to do list)
Certainly I’ve long had felt that the publicly traded company isn’t the best way to organise ownership of larger organisations, and that partnerships like John Lewis are much better (there is no better motive that being a stakeholder in an enterprise, again more thoughts on this warrant a more detailed post).
Only question is how could a move in this direction come about? One idea I’ve had is to have a lower rate of corporation tax for firms, say a 10% discount for firms that have 10% of stock owned by an employee trust, increasing by each extra percentage of shares owned by the staff.
What do you think? Is this something Libertarians could support?
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