Employee ownership (EO) encompasses ESOPs, worker cooperatives, and other broad-based ownership structures. Decades of research demonstrate its transformative impact on workers, businesses, and communities.
The Dual Crisis: Wealth Inequality & Business Succession
America's Wealth Concentration
- Top 10% of U.S. households hold two-thirds of the nation's wealth
- Bottom 50% hold just 2.4% of total wealth
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, cited in HBS BiGS Worker Ownership Report (May 2025)
The Fixed-Wage System Has Failed
"The fixed-wage system has collapsed for the middle class. Research confirms that the families who are getting wealthy are getting wealthy because they have access to capital ownership, to capital income, to a percent of business profits, to a percent of business ownership, to dividends, to interest, to ownership of bonds. So, what we need to do is figure out a way to expand those things." — Joseph Blasi, Rutgers University
The Business Succession Crisis
- 51% of U.S. businesses have owners over age 55 who will retire in the next 10 years
- 2.9 million businesses affected
- 32.1 million employees at risk
- $6.5 trillion in revenue at risk
Source: Census Bureau; Project Equity using Census and Labor Department data
The Succession Gap:
- Only 20-30% of businesses that go to market actually sell
- Up to 80% might have to close their doors
- Only 700 out of 17,430 M&A transactions in 2024 involved employee ownership (4%)
Sources: Exit Planning Institute; Statista; Christopher Mackin research
Worker Wealth Outcomes — The Core Impact
Key Insight: Employee ownership creates wealth for workers who lack access to capital — with zero cash investment required. Ownership is granted through company contributions, not worker savings.
Wealth Accumulation
- Median ESOP account value: $164,000 (vs. $17K typical household savings)
- Long-tenure (10+ years): $300,000+
- Retirement savings: 2x higher than non-EO employees
- Median cooperative equity: $2,000 per worker
Sources: National Center for Employee Ownership; Blasi and Kruse research; Democracy at Work Institute
Closing the Racial Wealth Gap
Employee-owners of color have 30% higher median income and 79% higher median net worth than non-owners of the same demographics.
Wealth Multiples by Demographic (ESOPs):
- African-American Women: $200 general population → $32,000 ESOP participant (160x)
- Latina Women: $100 general population → $143,500 ESOP participant (1,435x)
- Latino Men: $950 general population → $200,000 ESOP participant (210x)
Source: Rutgers Institute, W.K. Kellogg Foundation Study (2015-2018): 200 workers, 21 ESOP companies, 16 states
Reaching Underserved Populations
Worker cooperative demographics show EO naturally reaches underserved groups:
- 74% women in cooperative workforces
- 52% Hispanic/Latine — two demographics historically underpaid
- 66% of new worker-owners since 2010 are women
- 60% in communities of color
- Democratic governance: One-member, one-vote regardless of race, gender, or position
Sources: Democracy at Work Institute; U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives (2023 Census)
Wage & Wealth Building Over Time
- Wage increase post-transition: 20% average (Project Equity, 10 companies)
- Case study wage increase: 45% median (Adams & Chittenden Scientific Glass, 2019-2024)
- Cooperative wage premium: $4/hour boost vs. previous jobs
- Profit sharing (7 years): 10%+ increase to annual pay
- Exit proceeds: 50%+ of annual salary
Sources: Project Equity; DAWI; Jamie Finney, SmallCapital
Business Performance & Resilience
Key Insight: Employee-owned companies outperform on growth, survival, and stability — making EO a lower-risk investment thesis.
Performance Metrics:
- Growth: 2-3% faster than non-EO companies
- Survival: 21-23% more likely to remain in business
- Employment stability: 18% less workforce change vs. non-EO manufacturing
- Recession resilience: -1.7% jobs lost vs. -3.0% for non-EO (1999-2011)
- Loan default rate: <0.3% vs. 2-3.75% typical
- Retention intent: 52% no plans to leave within next year
- Tenure: 6 years average vs. 3.5 years private sector
Sources: NCEO; Fidan Kurtulus (UMass Amherst); Blasi and Kruse; Department of Labor; Ownership Capital Lab; DAWI; BLS
Why EO Companies Perform Better
Three characteristics of successful employee-owned companies:
- Long-term value creation over short-term gain (e.g., not laying off workers during Covid)
- Employees treated as stakeholders — not just cost centers
- Deliberate preservation of workforce trust — recognized as a key organizational asset
"The key element of really unlocking value in these programs for the workforce is to create an environment where there's real trust between what your C-suite is saying and what the front-line worker believes and feels empowered to do." — Anne Arlinghaus, Partner at KKR
Community & Civic Impact
Economic & Civic Benefits:
- Local economic multiplier: 3x more money circulating vs. absentee-owned chains
- Community volunteering: 46% of employee-owners vs. 30% of non-owners
- Voter participation: 73% voted (2008 election) vs. 63% for non-owners
"How workers are treated and the way in which they can participate in firms has important effects on their abilities to engage as citizens in their communities and in their society." — Grant Rozeboom, Saint Mary's College of California
Bipartisan Political Support
When asked which type of company they would prefer to work for:
- 77% of Trump voters (2016) chose "owned by employees"
- 76% of Clinton voters (2016) chose "owned by employees"
"Perhaps the secret sauce is that this is a completely bipartisan issue in the United States. Republicans view this as worker self-reliance... Bernie Sanders thinks it's democratic socialism. I don't care what you call it." — Christopher Mackin, Ownership Associates
The Awareness Gap — The Primary Barrier
Low Awareness Among Small Businesses
Companies with <20 employees:
- Only 6% aware of employee ownership options
- Represents 4.7 million businesses (out of 6M total)
- Highest concentration of minority- and women-owned businesses
Source: NCEOC & UNC Charlotte Urban Institute, Mecklenburg County Study 2023-2024
"ESOPs are sort of a black box for a lot of companies but also for the advisors they hire to guide them through the deal." — Courtney Funk, ButcherJoseph & Co.
Why Awareness Matters
Employee ownership addresses the racial wealth gap through:
- Distributing equity to workers regardless of background
- Enabling exits for minority business owners
- Preserving jobs in communities
- Building sustained wealth for working-class owners
Low awareness = primary barrier for underserved communities
Investment Opportunity & Market Size
Market Opportunity:
- Suitable for ESOP buyout: 140,000 businesses, 33M employees
- Suitable for cooperative buyout: ~1.1M businesses, 25M+ employees
- Total EO-suitable market: ~1.24M businesses, 58M+ employees, $25 trillion revenue
Source: Rutgers Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing (2022 data)
Current EO Landscape:
- 25 million workers (18% of workforce) have ownership stake in their company
- 15.2 million in ESOPs (11M active + 4.2M retired)
- 14 million in equity-compensation plans (stock options, RSUs)
Source: Blasi and Kruse, Rutgers Institute, General Social Survey (2022 data)
Investment Landscape:
- 53 funds in North America now provide EO financing
- Field growing rapidly since 2018
- <0.3% annual default rate on ESOP loans (vs. 2-3.75% typical)
Sources: Transform Finance research; Alison Lingane, Ownership Capital Lab
"If just 10% of the 'silver tsunami' went to EO, it could help 8.2 million Americans build wealth." — Alison Lingane, Ownership Capital Lab
Investment Thesis Summary:
- Market failure: Up to 80% of businesses for sale can't find buyers
- Scale opportunity: 1.24M businesses, $25T revenue suitable for EO
- Low default risk: <0.3% vs. 2-3.75% typical
- Evidence-based: 70+ years of EO track record
- Measurable impact: $164K median wealth per worker
Impact Investor Alignment
Economically Vulnerable Populations
Key Insight: EO serves economically vulnerable workers who need wealth-building pathways but lack access to capital. Zero cash investment required makes EO ideal for these populations.
ALICE Households (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed):
- 42% of US households are below the ALICE Threshold
- Above poverty line but can't afford basic living costs
- ~24M workers in ALICE households need wealth-building pathways
Source: United Way for ALICE 2024
Low-to-Moderate Income Workers (≤80% Area Median Income):
- Only 7% of workers from low-income families are employee-owners
- 30% of workers from high-income families are employee-owners
- This 4x participation gap represents the opportunity
Sources: Rutgers University; Fifty by Fifty 2019
Place-Based Impact (Opportunity Zones):
- 8,700+ Qualified Opportunity Zones (poverty rate ≥20% OR median income ≤80% of area median)
- Employee-owned businesses qualify as QOZ businesses
- CDFIs can sponsor Qualified Opportunity Funds for EO conversions
- Combines tax incentives with worker wealth-building
Sources: Aspen Institute; IRS; HUD/CDFI Fund
Impact Measurement Frameworks:
- B Corp: Worker-Owned Impact Business Model (40% minimum non-executive ownership)
- IRIS+ (GIIN): Employment Quality, Financial Inclusion metrics
- GIIRS: Impact Multiple of Money (Worker wealth + business preservation)
- Aspen Job Quality: Five dimensions including ownership & voice (EO strongest on ownership, voice)
UN Sustainable Development Goals — Tier 1 Alignment:
- SDG 1.4: "ownership and control over... property" — EO creates $164K median wealth vs. $17K typical
- SDG 5.a: women's "equal rights to... ownership" — 1,435x wealth multiple for Latina women; 74% women in cooperatives
- SDG 10.1: "income growth of bottom 40%" — 160x-1,435x wealth multiples for workers of color
- SDG 10.2: "inclusion of all, irrespective of... race, ethnicity" — 52% Hispanic/Latine in cooperatives; one-member-one-vote
- SDG 8.3: "decent job creation" in MSMEs — 2.9M businesses, 32M employees at risk
Note: Target text from UN General Assembly resolution A/RES/70/1 (2015). Connection to EO is analytical, not officially endorsed.
Research Citations
Primary Sources:
- Harvard Business School Institute for Business in Global Society — "The Possibilities of Worker Ownership" (May 2025)
- Joseph Blasi & Douglas Kruse, Rutgers University — Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership
- National Center for Employee Ownership (NCEO)
- Democracy at Work Institute (DAWI)
- Project Equity
- Fidan Kurtulus, UMass Amherst
- Rutgers/Kellogg Foundation Study (2015-2018)
- Employee Ownership Foundation
- U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives — 2023 Census
- NCEOC & UNC Charlotte Urban Institute (2023-2024)
- Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- Census Bureau
Impact Framework Sources:
- United Way for ALICE (2024)
- Fifty by Fifty (2019)
- Aspen Institute
- B Lab / GIIN / GIIRS
Last Updated: January 2026