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Forum Post: What is a Worker Cooperative

Posted 12 years ago on Oct. 24, 2011, 1:26 p.m. EST by Cooperativist (29)
This content is user submitted and not an official statement

A worker cooperative is a cooperative owned and democratically managed by its worker-owners. This control may be exercised in a number of ways. A cooperative enterprise may mean a firm where every worker-owner participates in decision making in a democratic fashion, or it may refer to one in which managers and administration is elected by every worker-owner, and finally it can refer to a situation in which managers are considered, and treated as, workers of the firm. In traditional forms of worker cooperative, all shares are held by the workforce with no outside or consumer owners, and each member has one voting share. In practice, control by worker-owners may be exercised through individual, collective or majority ownership by the workforce, or the retention of individual, collective or majority voting rights (exercised on a one-member one-vote basis).[1] A worker cooperative, therefore, has the characteristic that the majority of its workforce own shares, and the majority of shares are owned by the workforce.[2]

Internal structure

Worker cooperatives have a wide variety of internal structures. Worker control can be exercised directly or indirectly by worker-owners. If exercised indirectly, members of representative decision-making bodies (e.g. a Board of Directors) must be elected by the worker-owners (who in turn hire the management) and be subject to removal by the worker-owners. This is a hierarchical structure similar to that of a conventional business, with a board of directors and various grades of manager, with the difference being that the board of directors is elected.

If exercised directly, all members meet regularly to make - and vote on - decisions on how the co-operative is run. Direct workers' cooperatives sometimes use consensus decision-making to make decisions.[11] Direct worker control ensures a formally flat management structure instead of a hierarchical one. This structure is influenced by activist collectives and civic organizations, with all members allowed and expected to play a managerial role. Such structures may be associated with more radical political aims such as anarchism, libertarian socialism and participatory economics.[12][13]

Some workers' cooperatives also practice job rotation or balanced job complexes to overcome inequalities of power as well as to give workers a wider range of experiences and exposure to the different jobs in a work place so that they are better able to make decisions about the whole workplace. The Mondragon Bookstore & Coffeehouse is a good example of a workplace that does this.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Producer_cooperative

Start your cooperative today!

15 Comments

15 Comments


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[-] 3 points by Cooperativist (29) 12 years ago

Stop being a slave of the corporations. Don't work for them.

Reunite a group of professionals, and start your cooperative.

[-] 1 points by Cooperativist (29) 12 years ago

Do it, and do it now!

[-] 2 points by Cooperativist (29) 12 years ago

Learn about Mondragon Cooperative Corporation, the largest Worker Cooperative in the world:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mondrag%C3%B3n_Cooperative_Corporation

Amazing!

[-] 2 points by Cooperativist (29) 12 years ago

If you and your fellows don't have the funds to start the cooperative, ask for credit from a local Credit Union.

[-] 1 points by athertonjohn (2) 12 years ago

Great stuff, there are loads of online resources for starting a worker co-operative you don't have to be part of the system. Or like Mondragon create your own system.

America - http://american.coop/node/119 UK - http://www.uk.coop/economy/start-a-co-operative

[-] 1 points by Cooperativist (29) 12 years ago

Read this article:

http://opensource.com/business/10/7/cooperative-success-understanding-co-op-business-model

Title: "Cooperative success: Understanding the co-op business model"

[-] 1 points by Thinkdeer (250) 12 years ago

hell yes.

Any business can be ran collectively or cooperatively, it is the best way to hybridize co-operation and individualism.

[-] 1 points by RantCasey (782) from Saginaw, MI 12 years ago

Worker coops are very cool

[-] 1 points by Cooperativist (29) 12 years ago

Yes, they are!

Who said that a factory or a supermarket needs to have a "boss", a "owner"? They don't! Workers' Cooperatives can exist without a boss. Everybody is the boss, everybody is the owner!

[-] 1 points by RantCasey (782) from Saginaw, MI 12 years ago

Even if you do have your own business you most likely provide service for a corporation. You are tied into Big business no matter what. Giant corporations are tied into everything made in this country. Really try to avoid it.every business big and small is tied into big business.

[-] 1 points by Cooperativist (29) 12 years ago

That's the reason why the cooperatives must create federations, and do business with each other, avoiding the corporations the more that is possible.

[-] 1 points by RantCasey (782) from Saginaw, MI 12 years ago

Hopefully that would be nice. But I think starting to regulate big business along with creating new business models will hopefully change the economy. With an bigger unemployed work force willing to start working. This current time is a great opportunity to start new business ventures.

[-] 1 points by Cooperativist (29) 12 years ago

It's time to get rid of the old individualistic notion of "being the business owner". Workers' can unite and create big companies where they are at the same time the employees and the employer. A company with no owner, where everyone is a owner. This is called a cooperative. And it's far more likely to succeed than an individual small business.

[-] 1 points by RantCasey (782) from Saginaw, MI 12 years ago

Yes it is a progression society needs to take. People look at life like it's a competition and if they dont have power or money they are losing.