This Labor Day, Democratic presidential candidates will no doubt be touting their support for a $15 per hour minimum wage. None have opposed the idea.
A minimum wage increase would put more money in workersā pockets. But so far, only two candidates ā Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders ā have far-reaching proposals to give workers something even more important: more power.
Both senators, for example, support the idea of requiring big corporations to give workers a seat in their boardrooms.
Warrenās Accountable Capitalism Act would guarantee workers the right to elect 40 percent of their firmās board of directors. Warren hopes this will help companies break with the āshareholder-firstā model that has resulted in a fixation on short-term profits.
In Europe, such ācodeterminationā policies are widely prevalent, providing unions a strong voice in corporate decision-making. In Germany, for instance, workers choose a significant proportion of company board members ā and in certain industries, worker representatives exercise equivalent control to shareholders.
In addition to his Workplace Democracy Plan, which among other things would allow workers to organize throughout entire industries (and not just at their individual workplaces), Sanders is also reportedly developing a proposal to give workers a direct ownership stake in their companies.
This idea also has European roots.
In the UK, for example, the Labour Party program for Inclusive Ownership Funds would gradually shift up to 10 percent of large firmsā stock ownership into worker funds. Workers would receive dividends of up to around $600 per year, with any excess revenue going national welfare programs.
This UK plan can be traced back to a similar, but bolder, proposal in 1970s Sweden.
At that time, Swedish trade unions had agreed to keep wages down as part of an anti-inflation pact with employers and the government. But trade union economist Rudolf Meidner saw how corporations were accumulating excess profits in the arrangement and vowed to do something about it.
Under the āMeidner Plan,ā Swedish workers wouldāve continued to go without inflation-creating pay raises, but their economic power wouldāve increased through the transfer of corporate voting share into new employee investment funds. After just a few decades of operation, Meidner envisioned these funds securing majority control over the Swedish stock market.
The plan sparked a massive corporate backlash. Even ABBA opposed it! (Band members not only topped the global pop charts ā they also happened to own several companies.) The countryās center-left Social Democratic Party eventually rejected it, too.
Still, Meidnerās vision remains inspiring. Here in the United States, looking at how executives and wealthy shareholders have pocketed the lionās share of Republican tax cut windfalls, itās clearer than ever that we need transformative change if workers are to get their fair share of the fruits of their labor.
A Next System Project poll found that a majority of Americans already support a policy resembling the proposed UK Inclusive Ownership Funds.
Economists have long grappled with how to couple traditional tax and wage policy with the broader question of building worker power. In the 2020 election, both Sanders and Warren have proven serious about confronting the latter challenge ā though a few things still separate them.
Sanders deserves special praise for explicitly naming the āworking classā movement he hopes to build. Recent reports revealed that Warrenās campaign, by contrast, repeatedly crossed a Culinary Union picket line in Las Vegas, which shows that we must hold āpro-workerā candidates accountable too.
This Labor Day, itās time this country had a real conversation about building power for the working class.
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