Abstract

PurposeA range of studies have shown that performance is typically higher in organisations with employee share ownership (ESO) schemes in place. Many possible causal mechanisms explaining this relationship have been suggested. These include a reduction in labour turnover, synergies with other forms of productivity-enhancing communication and participation schemes, and synergies with employer-provided training. The paper aims to discuss these issues.Design/methodology/approachThis paper empirically assesses these potential linkages using data from the 2004 and 2011 British Workplace Employment Relations Surveys, and provides comparisons with earlier analyses conducted on the 1990 and 1998 versions of the survey.FindingsSubstantial differences are found between the 2004 and 2011 results: a positive relationship between ESO and workplace productivity and financial performance, observed in 2004, is no longer present in 2011. In both years, ESO is found to have no clear relationship with labour turnover, and there is no significant association between turnover and performance. There is, however, a positive moderating relationship with downward communication schemes in 2004 and in 2011 in the case of labour productivity. There is no corresponding relationship for upward involvement schemes.Research limitations/implicationsThe results are only partially supportive of extant theory and its various predictions, and the relationship between ESO and performance seems to have weakened over time.Originality/valueThe study further questions the rhetoric offered in support of wider ESO.

Highlights

  • Tom Redman was very sceptical about the power of financial participation schemes, and employee share ownership (ESO) in particular, to leverage higher organisational performance

  • All regressions utilise the workplace weights supplied with the Workplace Employment Relations Surveys (WERS) data, and include a vector of control variables based on previous research in the area

  • The first of these tables presents results for ESO and labour productivity, whilst the second displays the results for ESO and financial performance

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Summary

Introduction

Tom Redman was very sceptical about the power of financial participation schemes, and employee share ownership (ESO) in particular, to leverage higher organisational performance. His view was that, at the very least, such schemes needed to be part of a. Whilst there is widespread evidence that organisations with ESO schemes in place do have higher performance (Fernie and Metcalf, 1995; McNabb and Whitfield, 1998; Pendleton and Robinson, 2010; Sengupta, 2008; Kurtulus and Kruse, 2017), there is considerable debate as to how share ownership plans promote these favourable effects. The paper makes a contribution by updating earlier analysis of ESO using WERS and by systematically comparing the role of potential moderators which, hitherto, have been evaluated separately

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