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The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Employee and Management Owned Firms

Margaret Thatcher started a world trend during her tenure as Prime Minister is Downing Street. It is called: Privatization. It consisted of the transfer of control of a state-owned enterprise to the Private Sector. This was done by selling the shares of the company. At times, the control itself was maintained by the state - but the economic benefits emanating from the ownership of shares was partly sold to privates. Such economic benefits are comprised of the dividend yield of the shares plus the appreciation in their value (due to the involvement of the private sector) known as capital gains.

But the privatization process was not entirely homogeneous, uniform, transparent, or, for that matter, fair.

The stock of some of the enterprises was sold to an individual, or group of individuals, by a direct, negotiated sale. A “controlling stake” (nucleus) was thus sold, ostensibly yielding to the state a premium paid by the private investors for the control of the sold firm.

This method of privatization was criticized as “crony capitalism”. For some reason, a select group of businessmen, all cronies of the ruling political elite, seemed to benefit the most. They bought the controlling stakes at unrealistically low prices, said the critics. To support their thesis, they pointed to the huge disparity between the price at which the “cronies” bought the shares - and the price at which they, later, sold it to the public through the stock exchange. The “cronies” cried foul: the difference in the prices was precisely because of privatization, better management and financial control. Maybe. But the recurrence of the same names in every major privatization deal still looked suspiciously odd.

Then there was the second version: selling the shares of the privatized firms directly to the public. This was done using either of two methods:

  • An offering of the shares in the stock exchange (a cash method), or

  • The distribution of vouchers universally, to all the adult citizens of the country, so that they could all share the wealth accumulated by the state in an equitable manner. The vouchers are convertible to baskets of shares in a prescribed list of state enterprises (a nonchash method).

But a smaller group of (smaller) countries selected a whole different way of privatizing. They chose to TRANSFORM the state-owned firm instead of subjecting them to outright privatization.

Transformation - the venue adopted by Macedonia - is the transfer of the control of a firm and / or the economic benefits accruing to its shareholders to groups which were previously - or still are - connected to the firm.

In this single respect, transformation constitutes a major departure - not to say deviation - from classical privatization.

Ownership of the transformed firm can revert to either of the following groups, or to a combination thereof:

  • The employees of the firm, through a process called Employee BuyOut (EBO)

  • The management of the firm, in the form of a Management BuyOut or Buy In (MBO / MBI)

  • A select group from within the firm. Such a group uses the assets - current and future - of the firm as collaterals, thus enabling them to get the credits necessary to purchase the shares of the firm. This is called a Leveraged BuyOut, because the assets of the firm itself are leveraged in order to purchase it (LBO).

  • Finally, the creditors of the firm can team up and agree to convert the firm’s debts to them into equity in the firm, in a Debt to Equity Swap (DES).

      Sometimes, the state continues to maintain an interest in privatized - as well as in transformed - firms. This is especially true for natural monopolies, utilities, infrastructure and defence industries. All the above are considered to be strategic matters of national interest. Some countries - Russia and Israel, for ones - continue to own a “Golden Share”. This highly specific type of security allows the state to exercise decision making powers, veto powers, or, at least, control over business matters that it considers vital to its security, financial viability, or even to its traditions. Israel’s golden share in the national air carrier, EI AI, allows it to prevent flights in and out during the religiously holy day of Sabbath!

      Until very recently the common (economic) wisdom in the West had it that Transformation was - in the best case - a sterile, make - believe exercise. The worst case included cronyism and corruption. One thing was to privatize and another was to privateer. But there were some grounds for some solid criticisms as well:

      (1) The main ideological thrust behind privatization was the revitalization of stale and degenerated state firm. Badly managed, wrongly financially controlled, applying an incoherent admixture of business and non business (political, social, geopolitical) considerations to their decision making process - state firm were considered as anachronistic as dinosaurs. Many preferred to see them as extinct as those ancient reptiles. An injection of private initiative acquired the status of ideological panacea to the corporate malaise of the public sector.

      But this is precisely what was missing in the Transformation version. It offered nothing new: no new management, no new ideas (were likely to come from the same old team) and, above all and as a direct result of this preference of old over new - no new capital.

      To this, the supporters of Transformation answer that the one thing which is new - personal capitalistic incentives - far outweighs all the old elements. Incentive driven initiative is likely to bring in its wake and to herald the transformation - in the most complete and realistic sense - of the state firm.

      Change, renovation and innovation - say the latter - are immediate by products of personal profit motivation, the most powerful known to Mankind.

      (2) The process of Transformation blurred the distinction between labour, management and ownership. Employees acted as potential managers and as co-owners in the newly transformed companies. The very concept of hierarchy, clear chains of authority (going down) and of responsibility (going up) - was violated. A ship must have one captain lest it sinks. It is not in vain that the management function was separated from the ownership function. Employees, managers and owners, all have differing views and differences of opinion concerning every possible aspect of corporate governance and the proper conduct of business.

      Employees want to maximize employment and the economic benefits attached to it - managers and shareholders wish to minimize this parameter and its effects on the corporation. Managers wish to maximize their compensation - employees and owners wish to minimize or moderate it, each group for its own, disparate reasons.

      This break in the “chain of command”, this diffusive, fog like property of the newly transformed entity lead to dysfunction, financial mismanagement, lack of clarity of vision and of day to day operations, labour unrest (when the unrealistic expectations of the workforce are not met).

      So, at the beginning, during the 1980s, the West preferred to privatize state owned firms - rather than to transform them. A fast accumulating body of economic research demonstrated unambiguously that privatization did miracles to the privatized firms. In certain cases, productivity shot up 6 times. Between 60 to 80 percent of GNPs in the West are private now and a vigorous trend to privatize what remains of the public sector still persists.

      But the same studies revealed a less pleasant phenomenon: only a select group of businessmen benefited from privatization. The paranoid allusions of the critics of this process were completely substantiated. Something was very corrupted in implementation of the seemingly wholesome idea of privatization. The public - as a whole - economically suffered.

      This led to the emergence of a new social consciousness. It was provoked by the unacceptable social costs of capitalism: more people under the poverty line, homelessness, a radicalization in the inequity of the distribution of income among different strata of society. But this trend was enhanced by the apparent corruption of the privatization process.

      This new social consciousness converged with yet another all important and all pervasive trend: the formation of small businesses by small time entrepreneurs. The latter functioned both as owners and as employees in their firms. There were 16 million such owners-workers in the USA alone (1995 figures). About 99% of the 22 million registered businesses in the USA were small businesses. No economic planner or politician could ignore these figures. Employee owned firms became the majority in the service and advanced technology sectors of the economy - the fastest growing, most lucrative sectors.

      In its own way, as a result of these two trends, the West was moving back to transformation and away from privatization, away from separation of ownership and labour, away from differentiation between capital and workforce. This is a major revolution.

      The OECD (the organization of the richer countries in the world) established an institute which follows trends in the poorer parts of the world, politely called “Economies in Transition”. This is the CCET.

      According to the CCET’s latest report, privatization continues in an uneven pace throughout the former Eastern Bloc. Some countries nearly completed it. Others have claimed to have completed it - but haven’t even started it in reality. Some countries - Macedonia amongst them - have sold the shares of state owned firms (=businesses with social capital) to managers and workers - but the managers and workers have largely not paid for these shares yet. It is by no means certain that they will. If the managers and workers default on their obligations to pay the state - the ownership of the company will revert back to the state. This is paper privatization, a transformation of expectations. No one can seriously claim that the transformation is completed before the new owners of the firms respect their financial obligations to the state.

      In all, privatization the world over, proceeded more rapidly with small firms. Selling the bigger firms was much more difficult. Most of this behemoths were composed of numerous profit centres and loss making business activities. A solidarity of accounts and guarantees existed between the various operations. The more profitable parts of a company supported and subsidized the less competent, the losing parts. This was not very attractive to investors.

      The official figures are heart warming. In parentheses - the percentage of firms privatized:

      Albania , Czech Republic , Estonia , Hungary , Lithuania, Poland and Slovakia all privatized 90% of their small firms. In Russia and Latvia, the figure is 70%.

      The picture is more clouded with the larger firms:

      Czech Republic (81%), Hungary, Estonia (75%), Lithuania (57%), Russia (55%), Latvia and Slovakia (46%), Mongolia (41%), Poland (32%), Moldavia (27%), Romania (13%), Belarus and Bulgaria (11%), Georgia (2%).

      But what hides behind the figures?

      The Czech Republic is infamous for its cronyism and for the massive transfer of wealth to the hands of a few people close to government circles.

      On the face of it, the situation in Poland looks a bit better: a universal voucher system was instituted. People were allowed to deposit their shares with 14 management funds. These funds also bought some of the shares, making them part owners. They control now 500 enterprises, which make up 5% of the country’s GNP.

      Some of these funds are 50% foreign owned, so their management and moral standards are Western. But, even there, rumours abound and not only rumours.

      So, what is better - privatization or transformation?

      Maybe the lesson is that we are all human. There is no method immune to human fallacies and desires, to corruption or to allegations of it. Transformation tends to benefit more people - so, maybe it looks more just. But long term it is inefficient and leads to the ruining of the firms involved and to permanent damage both to the economy and to the workers-owners. Is it better to be the owner of a bankrupt firm - or to work in a functioning firm, where you have no ownership stake? This is not an ideological or a philosophical question. Ask the employees of the Pelagonija Construction Group.

      Privatization, on the other hand, is much more open to manipulation - but at least it secures the continued existence of the firms and the continuous employment of the workers.

      Sometimes, in economic reality, we have to give up justice (or the appearance of it) - in order to secure the very survival of the workers involved.

      I, personally, prefer privatization over transformation.

      About The Author

      Sam Vaknin is the author of “Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited” and “After the Rain - How the West Lost the East”. He is a columnist in “Central Europe Review”, United Press International (UPI) and ebookweb.org and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com. Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.

      His web site: http://samvak.tripod.com

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Deja Vu in 2005 for Astros

First things first for this edition of the Houston Astros, according to Manager Phil Garner, get to .500. If this squad can go 5-2 this upcoming week leading up to the All Star break, they will do just that. This minor goal, in turn, will also place them right with the Cubs for 2nd place in the NL Central. Granted, Houston is not gonna catch St. Louis, the Cards will be clinching the division sometime in early to mid September, but the NL Wild Card is not out of the question.

On Sunday afternoon, Roger Clemens shut down the Cincinnati Reds to move the Astros to four games below .500, and also within 6 games of the Atlanta Braves, the current Wild Card leader. All the talk of Clemens return to the NY Yankees, or even an in-state swap with the Texas Rangers have come to an abrupt halt. Considering the Rangers recent struggles, and the impending suspension of their ace, Kenny Rogers, looks like Houston has the best chance of the two Texas teams of making postseason play.

This feat is amazing for a team that began the season without Lance Berkman, forced to start basically an “all rookie” outfield to open the year, and losing team captain Jeff Bagwell for the season early on. The injuries to Berkman and Bagwell, coupled with the inability to resign the top catch in free agency, Carlos Beltran and allowing Jeff Kent to head West , left this teams offense in shambles. And it showed, until a few weeks ago.

The turnaround: Willie Taveras and Craig Biggio have been getting on base in front of Berkman, Ensberg, and Lane., Berkman is getting his swing back after missing the first month and a half of the season. Ensberg has began hitting for power again, and has solidified his hold on 3rd base (and what should have been an All Star game appearance, imo), and Lane has realized he can hit Major League pitching, and it’s built his confidence. Most importantly for the offense, Phil Garner has shown patience with these hitters, and allowed this lineup to take shape.

It also doesn’t hurt when you have three pitchers like Clemens, Oswalt, and Pettitte who can go deep into games and not expose a thin relief corps. And as a lineup, you know you don’t have to spot these guys 5 runs for them to win. Unfortunately, early in the year, these guys were getting very little (or no) run support.

It is still gonna be an uphill climb for Houston. By all indications, this will be the team that Management is gonna field the rest of the year, no blockbuster trade, like the one last year that brought in Beltran for the seecond half of 2004. The Astros are interested in bringing in a reliever or two to shore up the bullpen, but it’s still very well possible this team contends. They will be seeing a lot of teams that have thrown in the towel (Cincy, Pittsburgh, Milwaukee) and are looking towards “next year”. It’s also no sure bet that Chicago will stay healthy, or string together any sort of consistancy to shore up 2nd place. Couple that with the fact that no “dominant” teams exist in the East or West (Washington is not dominant, imo, but they are a gritty bunch), the NL Wild Card can conceivably be won with an 85-77 or 86-76 record.

The Astros have weathered the worst already in 2005, and I give them credit for not folding the tent and giving up on this season. But, I’m not surprised, considering that Phil Garner is the one leading them into battle.

John Onan (aka Ego74) is sports moderator at the Online Players Union http://www.theopu.com
and a football contributor at realfootball365.com

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The Darkest Day

“In each and every province where the command and decreecame, there was great mourning among the Jews, with fasting, weeping and wailing; and many lay on sackcloth and ashes.” (Esther 4:3)

Israel has a long history of “darkest days”. Amazingly this one coincides with many of them and what is considered the “darkest day” on the Jewish calender. Thousands of innocent people have been ripped from their homes. Homes that some have lived in for decades. Think about that. Thrown out of the home you lived in for 30 years. The reason? Appeasement to terrorists. The belief that bloodthirsty Muslim fanatical terrorists won’t kill the innocent if you force thousands of Jewish people from their homes. Meanwhile as they are forced from their homes, terrorists threaten complete destruction of Israel and the Jews. It is heartbreaking and appalling. The Palestinians are a terrorist state. Look at who they chose to be at the helm all these many years. Yasser Arafat. He’d still be there now if he were alive. But suddenly they are nice people? Even though their children have been raised and brainwashed to hate and kill Jews, they are ready for peace?

What Israel has done is backed themselves further into a corner. And given the terrorists a seaport to bring in weapons that will be used against them. It is insanity. When will people learn from history? We are talking recent history here. Sadly, Israel could have eliminated all their enemies if they were an aggressive nation. They have been given plenty of reasons to do so. Now they are negotiating with terrorists. Sworn enemies of Israel who have stated time and again that the complete elimination of the Jews is their goal. They are raised from small children to hate and kill Jews. Do you think they are going to suddenly love the Jews? We can’t even eliminate racism in this country. How do you stop it with people who have been trained to hate? It’s just not enough anymore to be the toughest kid on the block. You need to be quick to go after those who are aiming to kill you. If they strike you first, you might not live to fight another day. Chemical, biological and nuclear weapons are in the hands of those who want America and Israel destroyed. Not to mention a host of “smaller” weapons that can kill hundreds. It’s not the time to trust murderers.

The media keeps repeating how the Jewish people received their eviction notices. I have heard it many times. I got it the first time. It is the subtle language that says they shouldn’t be there. They were evicted. Forget the fact that they did nothing wrong and those are their homes. When Israel would bulldoze a house harboring known terrorists, the media was there showing the mothers of murderers crying. The naive are led to believe that the oppressed are the oppressors. We are supposed to have sympathy for terrorists. After all, they didn’t get their eviction notices. It’s insane. I feel like Hitler is alive and well. He would be loving the anti-semitism that exists in the world today. He would love the American media.

The mainstream media as always is in on the deception. I saw a video of what the seaport will look like, teaming with commerce and recreation. Sailboats and jet skis. First of all, these are Muslims, right? I don’t think they are supposed to have that kind of fun, are they? I’m not sure they are supposed to have any fun but I guess that is beside the point. Let’s use some common sense. If you see hundreds of surfing jet skiing Muslims, you can believe there is nothing amiss if you want. Sorry, I’m not buying it. You know what that seaport will be used for. And commerce? What commerce? What do terrorists produce? Turbans? They are busy making weapons to kill Jews and Americans. There is a reason the Palestinians are so poor, beside the fact that Yasser Arafat was a thief. They have chosen to spend their money and time fighting a peaceful foe they had no chance of defeating. Their philosophy has not changed. This is what they are saying now:

“Today we are celebrating the liberation of Gaza and the northern West Bank; tomorrow we will celebrate the liberation of Jerusalem.” New Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas

Muhammed Dahlan, Civil Affairs Minister, stood next to Abbas and proclaimed: “the day of victory and the beginning of a new era that was achieved with the blood of our martyrs.”

Abbas also said, “From here, from this place, our nation and our masses are walking toward the establishment of an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital.”

That’s hard news and isn’t what the media chooses to focus on. The media keeps repeating how the Jewish people received their eviction notices. I have heard it many times. I got it the first time I heard it. It is the subtle language that says they shouldn’t be there. They were evicted. Forget the fact that they did nothing wrong and those are their homes. When Israel bulldozed houses harboring known terrorists, the media was there showing mothers of terrorists crying. We are supposed to have sympathy for terrorists. After all, they didn’t get their eviction notices. It’s insane. I feel like Hitler is alive. He would be loving the anti-semitism that exists in the world today. He would love the American media.

It amazes me that liberals through their words and beliefs give encouragement to the terrorists. Don’t they realize that if the Jews and Christians were all gone they would be next? What do you think Muslims think of liberals? They hate the culture. Sex drugs and rock and roll? I don’t think so. Abortion? Women don’t have rights. The gay lifestyle? Guess again. The only reason they hate Christians and Jews more is because they stand up and fight. And well, of course because of Jesus. But do you really think that if all that was left were Muslims and liberals that they won’t kill the liberals? Oh, you’ll be a liberal Muslim? Guess what? Bang bang, you’re dead. They are happy to have you help their cause right now, though. Divide the country. Distract. Let the American media spend countless hours on Natalee Holloway coverage and anti-war military mother’s. Meanwhile we are at war with a heartless, gutless enemy that loves killing women and children. Using the abortion issue as a smokescreen while they are quiet as we lose our fundamental constitutional rights. A monkey could do a better job of prioritizing the news than the tabloid media we have.

The fact that this heartbreaking injustice is being done voluntarily by the Israeli government and encouraged by our government makes it all the more disheartening. It shows that Israel has it’s share of liberals, terrorist sympathizers and fools just like America does. Benjamin Netanyahu resigned because he could not be a part of the sellout of the Jews. What are you going to give up to the liberals and terrorists? Don’t you know what you’ve already lost?

Food For Thought:

For when they shall say, peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape. 1 Thessalonians 5:3

For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. All these are the beginning of sorrows. Matthew 24:7

And in that day will I make Jerusalem a burdensome stone for all people: all that burden themselves with it shall be cut in pieces, though all the people of the earth be gathered together against it. Zechariah 12:3

Gene LaBarge is the author of http://www.BlogChow.com.

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