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"Worker-Owners of America, Unite!"

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Dan Clore

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Dec 16, 2011, 4:19:13 AM12/16/11
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http://www.democracynow.org/2011/12/15/worker_owners_of_america_unite_will
December 15, 2011
"Worker-Owners of America, Unite": Will Cooperative Workplaces
Democratize U.S. Economy?

As the Occupy Wall Street movement continues to protest record levels of
wealth and income inequality, we turn to an author who says the U.S.
economy might be becoming more democratic. Gar Alperovitz argues in an
op-ed in today’s New York Times that we may be in the midst of a
profound transition toward an economy characterized by more democratic
structures of ownership. Alperovitz finds that 130 million Americans are
members of some kind of cooperative, and 13 million Americans work in an
employee-owned company. He says the United States may be heading toward
something very different from both corporate-dominated capitalism and
from traditional socialism. "I think we’re seeing a change in attitude,
both increasing doubts about what’s now going on in the economy, deep
doubts, very deep doubts—thanks to Occupation, it’s crystallized—but
this other trend of saying, 'What do you want? Where are we going?' in
some ways to democratize the economy in a very American way," Alperovitz
says. [includes rush transcript]
Filed under Financial Meltdown, U.S. Economy, Occupy Wall Street

Guest:
Gar Alperovitz, professor of political economy at the University of
Maryland. His op-ed, "Worker-Owners of America, Unite!" is published
today in the New York Times. A new edition of his book, America Beyond
Capitalism: Reclaiming Our Wealth, Our Liberty, and Our Democracy, has
also just been published.

JUAN GONZALEZ: As the Occupy movement continues to protest record levels
of wealth and income inequality, we turn to an author who says the
economy might be becoming more democratic. Gar Alperovitz argues in an
op-ed in today’s New York Times that we may be in the midst of a
profound transition towards an economy characterized by more democratic
structures of ownership.

AMY GOODMAN: Alperovitz finds that 130 million Americans are members of
some kind of cooperative, and 13 million Americans work in an
employee-owned company. He says the U.S. may be heading toward something
very different from both corporate-dominated capitalism and from
traditional socialism.

Gar Alperovitz is a professor of political economy at the University of
Maryland. His op-ed is called "Worker-Owners of America, Unite!" It’s
out today in the New York Times. A new edition of his book, America
Beyond Capitalism: Reclaiming Our Wealth, Our Liberty, and Our
Democracy, has also just been published.

So, what’s the evidence for this, Gar?

GAR ALPEROVITZ: Well, it’s piling up right beneath the surface, that the
press, the normal press, hasn’t been covering. You know, 130 million
people, that’s 40 percent of United States, involved in credit unions,
co-ops all over the country, that don’t get any publicity. And roughly
13 million people, in one kind or another, have worker-owned
companies—again, five or six million more people than are involved in
labor unions. And several states are attempting to set up state banks,
like the existing Bank of North Dakota. A number of cities are trying to
set up city banks. San Francisco and Portland are the latest ones on the
list. So, if you look deeper, you find wonderful experiments going on.
One really interesting one in Cleveland, where there’s a group of
cooperatively owned businesses by—in the community that are building a
hydroponic land kind of greenhouse, producing three to five million
heads of lettuce a year, a gigantic laundry—all this worker-owned. And
again, the press hasn’t been covering it, but there—it gives you a sense
of what could happen if the Occupy movement gets serious about simply
building on what’s already out there.

JUAN GONZALEZ: But in terms of a critical mass for the economy, are we
talking about here cooperatives that have a significant share of the
economic activity in the country, or are we talking largely about very
small co-ops that, while they may involve a lot of people, don’t really
have that much impact on the overall economy of the country?

GAR ALPEROVITZ: Well, that’s the interesting thing. Of course most of
this is still much smaller than the giant corporations—I mean, the ones
that got us into trouble and the ones that got nationalized, as in GM
and Chrysler and the big banks. And at some point, we’re going to have
to go to that level. But what’s happening, and I think because of the
pain levels, we’re seeing these things grow over time simply because the
pain is growing.

And the ones I mentioned in Cleveland are not small. We’ve got a
laundry—an industrial-scale laundry going on there, owned by the workers
in that community, that’s probably the most ecologically advanced in the
country. This large greenhouse that’s developing, three to five million
heads of lettuce. These are not your little corner stores. So I see a
trend of expanding possibility, building step by step on what’s already
out there. We’ve learned a lot in the last several decades. And I think
it’s going to grow over time because of the pain levels. That’s what the
evidence suggests.

AMY GOODMAN: Talk more about the banks and the credit unions, the state
banks that are developing.

GAR ALPEROVITZ: Well, we’ve had, since the beginning part of the century
in North Dakota, a state-owned bank, highly successful. The press
doesn’t cover it. But it’s a bank that exists just like other banks, but
it doesn’t speculate. It doesn’t use money to do what the Wall Street
banks are doing. And as I say, there are about 14 states that have
introduced legislation to reproduce that, help finance small business,
on the one hand, but co-ops and worker-owned firms, and most of this
with a real green edge to it, ecologically developed. And in these city
banks, the same thing, trying to focus—for instance, in San Francisco,
there’s about $2 billion in state—in city money, that’s taxpayer money.
Instead of putting it in the Bank of America, the proposal is put it in
a city bank or a city credit union and then use that to finance
development in the city.

And I think that direction, using those public monies, and not simply to
finance corporations or speculation, but doing it in a way that builds
up this already developing knowledge and base of worker-owned companies,
community-owned developments, neighborhood developments, co-ops, that
form of development, the way to think about it is the—you know, the two
to three decades before the Progressive Era and the Populist Era really
made a big national impact. There was a developmental process, step by
step, at the state level. Take the women’s right to vote, the same
thing: step by step, state by state by state, building up over three to
four to five decades. But I think the pain level is so high, it’s going
to be quicker this time. So I take this local development process very
seriously. And I think it can lead to national change, as the New Deal
did at one point when the pain levels really struck. You know, at the other—

JUAN GONZALEZ: You also talk—

GAR ALPEROVITZ: At the other—go ahead.

JUAN GONZALEZ: If I can, you also talk about the changing attitudes,
especially among young Americans, toward concepts like capitalism and
socialism. Could you talk about that, as well?

GAR ALPEROVITZ: Yeah, there was a Rasmussen poll—now, we’re talking
about a fairly conservative polling group—in 2009. People under 30, they
found, were equally disposed as to whether capitalism or socialism was a
better system. And now that’s a big change. We’re past the time in the
Cold War when anyone who mentioned anything like a worker-owned company
or cooperative or public-owned enterprise was written out of court. Lots
of younger people are looking at what will work in the midst of a
failing economy, where the large corporations are falling day by day and
the speculators on Wall Street are speculating away the money. I think
we’re seeing a change in attitude, both increasing doubts about what’s
now going on in the economy, deep doubts, very deep doubts—thanks to
Occupation, it’s crystallized—but this other trend of saying, "What do
you want? Where are we going?" in some ways to democratize the economy
in a very American way, something very—you can explain to your
neighbors, this is—this makes sense, in these cities that I’ve been
talking about. You get a whole larger coalition of people understanding
there’s a hell of a lot of pain here, we can develop something here that
moves us in a direction of democratizing local economies and beyond.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, Gar Alperovitz, the name of your book, America
Beyond Capitalism. Do you think that’s possible in this country?

GAR ALPEROVITZ: Well, I’m a—you know, I’m a historian and a political
economist. Changes of major kinds, if you look at decade-by-decade
development, fundamental systemic change is as common as grass in world
history. A lot of pain. But I think an America beyond capitalism is a
real possibility. Again, if you stand back, the way the civil rights
folks did—my heroes are the civil rights leaders in the 1930s and '40s,
the ones who laid the basis for the big change that came in the ’60s,
and I think that's the way to understand what’s going on at the
grassroots level and the sort of things that Occupation has been
teaching us. Get in there now and begin to develop that base and that
foundation for the transformation.

AMY GOODMAN: Gar Alperovitz, I want to thank you for being with us,
professor of political economy at University of Maryland. His op-ed,
"America Beyond Capitalism." In fact, that’s the title of his book,
America Beyond Capitalism: Reclaiming Our Wealth, Our Liberty, and Our
Democracy, just published.



--
Dan Clore

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there only exists one danger -- that workers succeed in
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