The overarching goal of communism is for laborers to own the means of production instead of an owning/capitalist class. Employee owned businesses are the realization of communism within a capitalist society.

It seems to me that most communist organizations in capitalist societies focus on reform through government policies. I have not heard of organizations focusing on making this change by leveraging the capitalist framework. Working to create many employee owned businesses would be a tangible way to achieve this on a small but growing scale. If successful employee owned businesses are formed and accumulate capital they should be able to perpetuate employee ownership through direct acquisition or providing venture capital with employee ownership requirements.

So my main questions are:

  1. Are organizations focusing on this and I just don’t know about it?
  2. If not, what obstacles are there that would hinder this approach to increasing the share labor collective ownership?
  • FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website
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    5 hours ago

    In terms of communism, as dreamt up by Marx and Engels, you can only turn a completely capitalist economy into a communist one. This has never been achieved, shortcuts have been taken. All communist states in existence have either turned authoritarian or to dust. So in my view, there aren’t many communist movements left in the world. They may use the word but either M&E wouldn’t like them or they don’t really have a lot of support behind them. No support, no money. Capitalists have a lot of money. People with a lot of money tend to have the ear of their leaders. If an investor is interested it’ll be real hard to go for an employee-owned model (excluding models with free publicly traded shares). If investors are not interested, the business may be failing and employee ownership is the last hurrah before the end. Capitalism tends to come up on top.

    • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      This is generally wrong. Marx and Engels believed Capitalism itself prepares the foundations for Socialism, but not that revolution had to wait for Capitalism to fully develop to succeed. Socialist governments can oversee economies and build towards Communism without needing to be fully developed Capitalist states before the revolution. As a result, Marx and Engels would support historical Communist movements like Cuba, the USSR, PRC, etc, especially if they had lived to see Capitalism turn to Imperialism, shifting revolutionary pressure from the most developed countries to the most Imperialized countries.

  • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 hours ago

    If successful employee owned businesses are formed and accumulate capital they should be able to perpetuate employee ownership

    One issue is, that isn’t necessarily the priority the employee owners will have. I followed some news of a successful coop business where I lived, that sold the business because it had become worth so much that the payout was life changing money for all of those people, so they voted to take the money and potentially retire sooner rather than keep going as a coop.

    • Yondoza@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      6 hours ago

      Ahh fantastic point. There isn’t really an incentive for the individuals to maintain/perpetuate the institution.

  • Phoenix3875@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    According to the UK’s Labour Party’s report on worker co-operatives in 2017, the main difficulty is access to credit (capital). It makes sense since the model basically eliminates “outside investors”. It has to

    1. Bootstrap with worker’s own investment, or
    2. Get investment from credit unions, or
    3. Have (national or local) government to back it up

    Even in the above cases, the credit is often not large or cheap enough for the cooperatives to be competitive. (There are examples in the report that serve as exceptions, I highly recommend giving it a read.)

    So at least from this, I’d think the appropriation of means of production would be more fundamental rather than being a simple result of some special way of organizing.

  • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    10 hours ago

    I suspect a big part is tax and investment law.

    A bunch of poors (like me!) who band together won’t have much capital to buy inventory or equipment. I doubt banks and investors would lend to the bunch of poors, since they have a non-standard decision making structure.

    That’s gonna make it hella hard to get started.

    • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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      10 hours ago

      Hard to get started, and not Communist, either. OP is confusing worker owned private property with the collectivized system of Communism, hence why though Communist orgs support cooperatives as less exploitative than regular firms, neither is the basis of Communism.

  • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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    10 hours ago

    This isn’t really accurate, from a Marxist perspective. Marx advocated for public ownership, ie equal ownership across all of society, not just worker ownership in small cells. This isn’t Communism, but a form of cooperative-based socialism. There are groups that advocate for worker cooperatives, but these groups are not Communist.

    Essentially, the reason why cooperatives are not Communist is because cooperatives retain class distinctions. This isn’t a growing of Communism. Cooperatives are nice compared to Capitalist businesses, but they still don’t abolish class distinctions. They don’t get us to a fully publicly owned and planned economy run for all in the interests of all, but instead create competition among cooperatives with interests that run counter to other cooperatives.

    Instead of creating a Communist society run for the collective good, you have a society run still for private interests, and this society still would inevitably erase its own competition and result in monopoly, just like Capitalism does, hence why even in a cooperative socialist society, communist revolution would still be on the table.

    • TechLich@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      If a worker co-op based society erased it’s competition and formed a monopoly co-op run for the benefit of workers, is that not just a communist managed economy at that point with the monopoly playing the role of the state before erasing itself?

      • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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        7 hours ago

        To even get there in the first place requires making several nearly impossible leaps. If such a thing could happen, it may be able to form something like that, but given that it would be a profit-driven firm it’s more likely that it would lose its cooperative character without a proletarian state over it to enforce that. More than likely, it would go the same way the Owenites went, moderate success at first before fizzling out and failing to overcome the Capitalist system.

  • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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    10 hours ago

    In my country, the communist party (very watered down version of communism but still) is behind/aligned with most unions and they defend that companies should either be owned by the employees (co-ops) or employees should have a stake and saying on companies governance.

    We have another left-wing party that even defends that failing companies should be returned to the employees, with government backed funding (loaned) if necessary to recapitalize the business and relaunch the company under employee governance.

  • Sodium_nitride@lemmygrad.ml
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    10 hours ago

    The overarching goal of communism is for laborers to own the means of production instead of an owning/capitalist class.

    No, the overarching goal of communism is to create a stateless, classless and moneyless society.

    Employee owned businesses are the realization of communism within a capitalist society.

    No. At best, you could say that coops are a proto-socialist element within a capitalist society. Firstly, I am using the term “socialist” as separate from “communist” here, and secondly, a proto-socialist element is a very different thing from an enclave of socialism within a capitalist world.

    The simple problem is that capital is capital. A capital is a self-reproducing social relation that competes with other capitals in a sort of evolution by natural/sexual/artificial selection on the markets. The problem is capital itself, and the solution is to destroy capital. Creating a new type of capital that is less destructive, or one that operates under less destructive modes is fine for countries where development has not reached to the point that they can directly gun towards communism. However, for advanced, and especially late-stage capitalist economies, the task is not to pursue further development of market forces, because market forces have already matured. The task is to eliminate market forces (although this may take time).

    Coops may give a more equal distribution of wealth amongst the workers, but the aim of the communists is to abolish wealth, because the very meaning of wealth is that a private individual gets to command the labor of others. That is the fundamental social relation that money embodies and facilitates. The only way to remove the power to exploit other people’s labor is to remove the ability to command labor. But if you cannot command labor, then money becomes worthless and your ownership of the coop doesn’t mean anything.

    Are organizations focusing on this and I just don’t know about it?

    Yes. A quick google search shows examples such as the international labor organisation

    If not, what obstacles are there that would hinder this approach to increasing the share labor collective ownership?

    Part of the fundamental problem is just that the bourgeois class is not stupid. They want exploitable workers and profits. If you deprive them of that, prepare to face their wrath as they abandon all pretenses of human rights or fairness or the sanctity of markets.

  • haui@lemmy.giftedmc.com
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    12 hours ago
    1. There are efforts to build emoloyee owned businesses around the world
    2. The system is pitted towards accumulation through psychopathic behavior which is absent in democratic companies, hence they’re disadvantaged
    3. Communists and anarchists are revolutuonists, not reformists. The reason is that reform makes the inherently cruel system easier to bear and abolishment less likely.
    4. Some want to go the reformist route to try if it is actually achievable
    5. Most importantly and very evident in the US: 100 yrs of reform can be rolled back in one day. We’re seeing that reform is pointless.
    • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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      11 hours ago

      Most importantly and very evident in the US: 100 yrs of reform can be rolled back in one day. We’re seeing that reform is pointless.

      It also means swinging the other way takes a day. (Unlikely, but now far more likely than before.)

      • haui@lemmy.giftedmc.com
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        11 hours ago

        Absolutely not. Progressive politics arent easy to understand and need vastly more effort to implement than regressive politics. You’re arguing completely against history.

        • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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          11 hours ago

          No they aren’t. A number of proposals have been kicked around for decades. There hasniot been the will to implement.

          • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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            9 hours ago

            Political Economy is material, not based on the willpower of individuals. Reforms are hard to get because the ruling class doesn’t want them, and they control the levers that can enable them in the first place, hence why revolution is necessary.

          • Sodium_nitride@lemmygrad.ml
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            10 hours ago

            A number of proposals have been kicked around for decades. There hasniot been the will to implement.

            That’s the point. A dictatorship of the bourgeoise will not implement progressive policies unless you fight hard for them. They will however, in the absence of resistance, implement increasingly reactionary policies in a heartbeat.

          • haui@lemmy.giftedmc.com
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            11 hours ago

            In that case I suggest a history class.

            There have been bloody protests over a long time, people died, there even was a revolution in france.

            All for some small changes that are absolutely logical.

            Now germany for example is reverting the 8 hr workday without any protests needed.

            The ignorance of people is insane.

            • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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              5 hours ago

              If conservatives can shape society with executive orders, progressives can as well.

              Shaping change grassroots is great, but progressives don’t need to be bound by different rules than conservatives.

              Edit: toning down my rudeness.

              • haui@lemmy.giftedmc.com
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                5 hours ago

                But again thats only technically true. There are no progressive majorities and fascist billionaires are manipulating the masses. Misinformation is ruling the discourse. What you’re sayibg is factually impossible at this point in time.

              • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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                5 hours ago

                This is both rude and ahistorical, laws are passed based on what the ruling class wants. The ruling class cannot abide Socialism unless the Proletariat becomes the ruling class through revolution.

                Watch your rudeness if you are going to be confidently incorrect.

  • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    12 hours ago

    I think communists and socialists and anarchosts and broadly leftists do argue for cooperatives and workplace democratisation.

    The reason they maybe don’t do it enough is because those businesses in our present environment will get beaten by exploitation mostly.

    Co-operatives by nature will sacrifice profit for employee conditions because they have more stakeholders (and shareholders) to be accountable to. Lower wages through exploitation will tend to reduce costs and allow the capitalist businesses to drop prices, and outcompete opponents and secure more investment capital due to higher market penetration, which will allow them to invest in their business, incl. Marketing and product development, and outcompete the more fair sustainable business, until they corner the market and can jack up.the prices and bleed consumers dry and push for laws/lack thereof to exploit employees and cut costs further.

    • Maeve@kbin.earth
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      8 hours ago

      I saw it happen with Walmart, Ace Hardware, Pizza Hut, Lowe’s/Home Depot. We used to have independent supermarkets too, who set their own prices based on local conditions. I live in an area where the supermarket in a nearby town (it’s really a village) often has lower prices on produce and meats. The big national brands cost more, and this store doesn’t get bulk discounts like Walmart, HT, and Kroger! The problem is I still have to go a few towns over to get decent coffee because Folgers, Maxwell House and Staryuck isn’t it, so when I get a ride, I have to buy extra and freeze it. The local independent store doesn’t have as good starting pay or benefits, though, but without their store, many of our older population would be in serious trouble. An elderly man kept me for some time in the meat department of our chain store because he said he was ashamed to be looking at low quality beef at those prices, when he used to farm and hunt his own. Years of farming to feed our country left him with hands that don’t work the way they used too. I didn’t buy their overpriced products, and felt bad for someone who destroyed their body for people who largely don’t even consider that nature gives us her body and blood for us to eat and drink, and from showing, weeding, irrigating, harvesting, processing, packaging, shipping, stocking, dusting, sweeping, waxing, checking, the individuals who suffer and destroy their bodies to get it to the table.

      I was in another independently owned grocery a few towns over by happenstance to pick up a few things while accessible. In less than 15 minutes, because I didn’t know where items were and asked, three different employees told me to wait, they’d be right back. I guessed they were asking or making sure. Each returned with the specific item I wanted, to save me steps! Again, every item but one was less expensive than the chains, and I am guessing they can’t compete with chain grocery starting pay, either.

      Interestingly enough, the employees do get a small profit sharing incentive.

    • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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      9 hours ago

      Cooperatives tend to be more stable than traditional firms, but they are both harder to start, and aren’t Communist. OP is confusing worker-owned private property with the abolition of Private Property, Communists don’t focus on worker cooperatives because cooperatives retain petite bourgeois class relations.

      Rather than creating a society run by and for all collectively, cooperatives are a less exploitative but still competition and profit-driven form of private business. Communists wish to move beyond such a format, even if we side with cooperatives over traditional firms when available.

    • Yondoza@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      12 hours ago

      I don’t agree with this. Shareholders extracting value from a company is arguably more of an ‘inefficency’ than treating employees fairly. Well treated employees provide a benefit to the company while shareholders purely remove resources.

      I have no data to back up my claim, just logic, so I could very well be wrong.

      • ladicius@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        You got a point there, and there may be a lot of data to prove that point.

        I am part of a housing cooperative (“Wohnungsgenossenschaft” in German), and these cooperatives are noticeably cheaper because they are owned by the members/renters and don’t have to generate any profit, just enough excess money to build new homes. The principle is very convincing if you live in it and save loads of money every month. The cooperatives employees aren’t overworking themselves, too.

  • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    12 hours ago

    The idea for a lot of communist ideologists is we don’t need these hyper competitive corporations. The end goal isn’t “higher GDP” (or more salary), it’s “better quality of life”. I think most unions are like that.

    • Yondoza@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      9 hours ago

      I understand the sentiment. I’m wondering about the efficacy of the strategies to achieve those end goals.

  • themoken@startrek.website
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    12 hours ago

    It’s really hard to generalize about leftist groups. The communists that feel this way have formed co-ops, or are cooperating with anarchists to do something like syndicalism (focused on unionizing existing businesses).

    But the methods to start and grow businesses in a capitalist country inherently rely on acting like a capitalist. Getting loans requires a business plan that makes profit, acquiring facilities and other businesses requires capital. Local co-ops exist because they can attract members and customers that value their co-opness, but it’s very hard to scale that up to compete at a regional level. It’s not impossible, but it’s hard to view it as an engine for vast change.

    Communists that focus on voting are delusional (in my opinion) but like all reformists they view the existing government as the mechanism to make widespread change.

    • Maeve@kbin.earth
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      8 hours ago

      Huh. Someone I know is trying to start a business with a longer-term aim of a co-op. Business insurance for themselves is going to run 30-40k minimum per year!

      • themoken@startrek.website
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        7 hours ago

        Perfect example. Insurance is an entire industry of blood sucking middle men producing absolutely nothing.

        Good luck to your friend. Sorry they have to support a useless leech corporation instead of, you know, paying that money to actual workers.