GET OUT THERE, PEOPLE! If you are just finding out about this, it's your chance to get to the factory and support this bold move for workers' rights!
Here, read my message about how factory occupations have happened elsewhere:
After the 2001 economic crash in Argentina, around 200 bankrupt and closed-down business were occupied and then taken over by their workers. Most of these workers formed cooperatives to manage the business without the boss, and run it themselves. Eventually, dozens of these "recovered" businesses were granted legal recognition by the government, which used eminent domain to transfer ownership from the original owners to the worker coops, giving a 20-year mortgage at favorable lending terms.
As it turns out, "recovered" businesses are doing rather well. They've discovered that the previous owners were pretty much unnecessary for running the business; ditto with top management. Most of the working people are paid at least as well as they were before the takeover, and many are getting paid more. In any case, it seems to be a good way to put a business back to work quickly, in a way that preserves peoples' jobs. Basically, the state settles the bankruptcy on its terms, in effect nationalizing the business, and then appoints the productive workers to run it. Perhaps the 20-year loan could be based on the amount of the outstanding credit settlement.
I've been in Argentina recently, and conducted interviews with workers at many of these businesses for the dissertation I am writing. I would love to make contact with someone among the Republic workers, and make sure they know about what's going on in Argentina. I could even share some Argentine contacts with recovered businesses, so they could swap notes. In any case, someone should let them know about this model for keeping a business from shutting down. A good lawyer and a sympathetic city council could make this happen here.
"They've discovered that the previous owners were pretty much unnecessary for running the business;"
Yes, when you remove existing debt obligations, and are able to walk into a business with a supply chain and sales channels already developed by someone else, I'm sure running a business is easy.
Someone had to build the business from scratch and fund its development, and take the risk of failure, and it was not the employees.
"Someone had to build the business from scratch and fund its development, and take the risk of failure, and it was not the employees."
Yeah, and someone also had to run the business into the ground. Who might that be - the Joes and Janes working on the line or the suits in their cozy offices? I can hazard a guess...
Reality check! This isn't a coconut factory! What's left of US manufacturing requires highly skilled and experienced engineers (whom can get jobs elsewhere) and deep pockets to design, test, market and coordinate. This isn't the kind of thing that a rat-pack of disgruntled floor workers could either bankroll or manage.
This is what happened in the Glorious Motherland on a grand scale and it worked so well there. Rise up! Rise up! You have nothing to lose but your chains.
The workers ran things so well over there. Just ask anyone living near Chernobyl.
Come on, everyone knows most of the real work is done at the bottom level, 'it' trickles downhill as the saying goes.
True, management has most or all of the responsibilities, and for that they get huge bonuses, even when the business is going belly up? I'm tired of it, myself!
Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
07 Dec 2008
Date Edited: 07 Dec 2008 01:06:34 AM
Here, read my message about how factory occupations have happened elsewhere:
After the 2001 economic crash in Argentina, around 200 bankrupt and closed-down business were occupied and then taken over by their workers. Most of these workers formed cooperatives to manage the business without the boss, and run it themselves. Eventually, dozens of these "recovered" businesses were granted legal recognition by the government, which used eminent domain to transfer ownership from the original owners to the worker coops, giving a 20-year mortgage at favorable lending terms.
As it turns out, "recovered" businesses are doing rather well. They've discovered that the previous owners were pretty much unnecessary for running the business; ditto with top management. Most of the working people are paid at least as well as they were before the takeover, and many are getting paid more. In any case, it seems to be a good way to put a business back to work quickly, in a way that preserves peoples' jobs. Basically, the state settles the bankruptcy on its terms, in effect nationalizing the business, and then appoints the productive workers to run it. Perhaps the 20-year loan could be based on the amount of the outstanding credit settlement.
I've been in Argentina recently, and conducted interviews with workers at many of these businesses for the dissertation I am writing. I would love to make contact with someone among the Republic workers, and make sure they know about what's going on in Argentina. I could even share some Argentine contacts with recovered businesses, so they could swap notes. In any case, someone should let them know about this model for keeping a business from shutting down. A good lawyer and a sympathetic city council could make this happen here.
Comments
Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
08 Dec 2008
Yes, when you remove existing debt obligations, and are able to walk into a business with a supply chain and sales channels already developed by someone else, I'm sure running a business is easy.
Someone had to build the business from scratch and fund its development, and take the risk of failure, and it was not the employees.
Re: Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
08 Dec 2008
Re: Re: Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
08 Dec 2008
Re: Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
08 Dec 2008
It doesn't really matter, does it. Where one failed the other succeeds - that is capitalism.
Re: Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
12 Dec 2008
It doesn't really matter, does it. Where one failed the other succeeds - that is capitalism.
Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
08 Dec 2008
Yeah, and someone also had to run the business into the ground. Who might that be - the Joes and Janes working on the line or the suits in their cozy offices? I can hazard a guess...
Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
09 Dec 2008
Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
09 Dec 2008
The workers ran things so well over there. Just ask anyone living near Chernobyl.
Re: Re: Chicago Workers Occupy Factory! Need Your Immediate Support!
09 Dec 2008
True, management has most or all of the responsibilities, and for that they get huge bonuses, even when the business is going belly up? I'm tired of it, myself!