In a twist that has left the crusty old boardrooms of Britain spluttering into their single malts, news has emerged that the United States is witnessing a bizarre epidemic of business owners voluntarily selling their companies to their employees. Yes, you read that right. Employers, the very people who have spent decades perfecting the art of payroll-induced anxiety, are now apparently waking up in the middle of the night, drenched in a cold sweat, and screaming: “Sweet liberty! My workers deserve a piece of this pie, and I don’t mean the metaphorical one I’ve been hoarding!”
Meanwhile, across the pond, Her Majesty’s Government has decided that this employee ownership malarkey is just the ticket for a post-Brexit utopia. Ministers, presumably having exhausted all other options for economic growth (including mandating the consumption of warm ale), are now championing employee ownership schemes as a viable economic model. One can only imagine the scene at Whitehall: a civil servant, clutching a graph that shows a gentle upward slope, whispers, “My God, it’s full of shares.”
Let’s dissect this absurdity, shall we? The very notion that a business owner might look at their workforce, those beleaguered souls who spend their days toiling under fluorescent lights, and think, “You know what? You deserve the profits, not just the leftover biscuits in the break room,” is so contrary to the spirit of capitalism that it borders on the heretical. For generations, we’ve been told that wealth trickles down like a faulty tap in a decaying mansion. Now, apparently, the tap has been replaced with a fire hose aimed directly at the proletariat.
The Americans, bless their deregulated hearts, have been at this for a while. Companies like Publix and WinCo have long been employee-owned, and they’ve consistently trounced their greedier competitors. But the recent surge of sales suggests a tipping point. Perhaps it’s the hangover from the Great Resignation, where workers finally realised that their loyalty was being traded for a branded keychain. Or maybe it’s the result of a secret government experiment involving the infusion of basic decency into the water supply. Either way, the result is the same: the workers are getting the means of production, one share at a time.
And what of Britain’s grand plan? The government, in its infinite wisdom, has decided that employee ownership is the sugar on the rather stale economic cake of Brexit. The Employee Ownership Association, a group that sounds like it was formed in a pub after a particularly rousing game of Monopoly, reports that the sector is growing. Ministers are tripping over themselves to offer tax breaks and advice to companies willing to embrace this model. It’s almost as if they’ve realised that a country full of people who own a tiny bit of something might be more stable than one full of people who own nothing but a sense of impending doom.
Of course, the cynics (and by cynics, I mean anyone with a functioning brain) will point out that this is a drop in the ocean. Most companies remain steadfastly feudal, with the lord of the manor (also known as the CEO) living in a penthouse while the serfs (also known as the staff) commute from the outer reaches of affordability. But the fact that this is even a conversation is a small miracle. It suggests that somewhere, deep beneath the layers of quarterly earnings and shareholder returns, a sliver of conscience has emerged like a crocus through a frozen lawn.
But let’s not get carried away. This is still a world where the average CEO earns as much in a day as their employees do in a year. Employee ownership, in its current form, is a polite rebellion, a gentle suggestion that maybe, just maybe, the people who actually make the widgets should have a say in how the widget factory is run. It’s not revolution; it’s a committee meeting with snacks.
And yet, there is something gloriously British about this approach. We’re not storming the barricades; we’re forming a co-operative and submitting a proposal for a closed-loop supply chain. We’re not guillotining the bosses; we’re offering them a generous retirement package with a gold-plated goodbye. It’s all so terribly civilised. One can almost hear the collective sigh of relief from the landed gentry as they realise that their crumbling estates might be saved by a workers’ trust rather than a flaming Molotov cocktail.
So here’s to the brave new world of employee ownership. It may be slow, it may be piecemeal, and it may involve a lot of paperwork, but it’s a start. In the meantime, I’ll be at the bar, raising a glass of the finest gin to the American capitalists who have unwittingly become the heroes of the proletariat. Cheers, you beautiful, bewildered bastards.









