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Employee Benefit Trust : ウィキペディア英語版
Employee stock ownership plan
An employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) is an employee-owner program that provides a company's workforce with an ownership interest in the company. In an ESOP, companies provide their employees with stock ownership, often at no up-front cost to the employees. ESOP shares, however, are part of employees' remuneration for work performed. Shares are allocated to employees and may be held in an ESOP trust until the employee retires or leaves the company. The shares are then either bought back by the company for redistribution or voided.
Some corporations are majority employee-owned; the term employee-owned corporation often refers to such companies. Such organizations are similar to worker cooperatives, but unlike cooperatives, control of the company's capital is not necessarily evenly distributed. In many cases, voting rights are only given to certain shareholders, and more senior employees may be allocated more shares than new hires. Compared with cooperatives, ESOP-centered corporations allow for company executives to have greater flexibility in governing and managing the corporation.
Most corporations, however, utilize stock ownership plans as a form of in-kind benefit, as a way to prevent hostile takeovers, or to maintain a specific corporate culture. These plans generally prevent average employees from holding too much of the company's stock.
==UK==

ESOPs became widespread for a short period in the UK under the government of Margaret Thatcher, particularly following the Transport Act 1985, which deregulated and then privatised the bus services. Councils seeking to protect workers ensured that employees accessed shares as privatisation took place, but employee owners soon lost their shares as they were bought up and bus companies were taken over.〔A Pendleton, J McDonald, A Robinson and N Wilson, ‘Employee Participation and Corporate Governance in Employee-owned Firms’ (1996) 10(2) Work, Employment and Society 205-226〕 The disappearance of stock plans was dramatic.〔L Trewhitt, ‘Employee Buyouts and Employee Involvement: A Case Study of Investigation of Employee Attitudes’ (2000) 31(5) Industrial Relations Journal 451, the way they vanished was ‘nothing short of dramatic’.〕
The John Lewis Partnership has been cited as an example of an employee share ownership.〔http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/david-laurie/john-lewis-economy_b_1954788.html〕〔http://www.johnlewispartnership.co.uk/csr/our-employees/employee-ownership.html〕 However, unlike some other employee ownership arrangements, partners in John Lewis have no proprietary right to their stake, and cannot buy or sell their rights, nor collective dissolve the entity.〔See (John Lewis Partnership, Constitution )〕 ESOPs are almost entirely opposite because at John Lewis, employees get a voice at work but cannot trade an ownership stake; an ESOP typically carries no meaningful voice but allows the interest to be bought and sold.
In July 2012, the Department for Business Innovation and Skills published a report called, "The Employee Ownership Advantage, Benefits and Consequences".〔http://www.project.nsearch.com/profiles/blogs/google-has-deleted-the-g8-venue〕 This report listed several major advantages of employee ownership including stronger long-term focus; increased employee representation at board level; and greater preference for internal growth. The report also highlighted that employee owned businesses face greater problems when it comes to raising capital and dealing with regulatory requirements. The study was based on data from a survey of 41 employee-owned businesses and 22 non-employee owned businesses in the United Kingdom, and also draws upon the published financial data of 49 EOBs and 204 non-EOBs in the UK.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne announced in a speech at the Conservative Party Conference on 8 October 2012 that the law would be reformed to create a new employment status for "employee-owners".〔http://www.conservatives.com/News/Speeches/2012/10/George_Osborne_Conference_2012.aspx〕 Employee-owners will pay no capital gains tax on any profit made from selling these shares, but will have to give up certain employment rights in return, including redundancy and unfair dismissal. The consultation by BIS was published on 18 October 2012.〔http://www.bis.gov.uk/assets/biscore/employment-matters/docs/c/12-1215-consultation-on-implementing-employee-owner-status.pdf〕 Lawyers have suggested that the employee-owner scheme could have significant unintended consequences as, under the existing proposal, it may be possible for entrepreneurs to set themselves up as employee owners in order to avoid capital gains tax. In practice, these entrepreneurs will be far more “owner” than “employee” and the employment rights they will be giving up are likely to be of much less value to them than to ordinary employees, and so the tax advantages of far greater value to them than to ordinary employees.
On 3 December 2012, the Government published its response to the consultation. It had decided to press ahead with the changes despite 92% of responses to the consultation being either "negative" or "mixed",〔https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/68731/12-1338-implementing-employee-owner-status-government-response.pdf〕 and despite it being "widely derided both in the House of Lords and in business chambers across the country."〔 The term "employee owner" was dropped in favour of the more accurate "employee shareholder". Lawyers have commented that uncertainty remains as to how these proposals will operate in practice.
In April 2013, the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill was passed and received Royal Assent. Implementation of the employee-shareholder provisions was expected to take place in October 2013. The employee ownership provisions received significant amendment in the House of Lords, with the unintended consequence possibly being that trade unions may now benefit.
At the end of June 2013, it became clear Osborne's "pet project"—it had been the centrepiece of his Conservative party conference speech in 2012—had flopped after it emerged that just four companies had enquired about his shares-for-rights scheme, while only two had gone the further step of asking for information about it; the chancellor had been expecting thousands of firms to actually sign up.〔 One UK official commented that, it was "an outrageously, terribly low figure", and even the Tory-leaning press described the failed idea as "Osborne at his worst".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Employee stock ownership plan」の詳細全文を読む



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