TY - JOUR
T1 - Profit sharing and employee share ownership in Ireland
T2 - A new departure?
AU - D'art, Daryl
AU - Turner, Thomas
PY - 2006/11
Y1 - 2006/11
N2 - Recently, it has been argued that contemporary conditions facilitating the growth of profit sharing and employee share ownership schemes represent a fundamental break with the past. The contemporary combination of government, employer and union support for profit sharing schemes amounts, it has been suggested, to a series of 'favourable conjunctures'. These conjunctures are viewed as constituting a break with the previous cyclical pattern. Given Irish government, employer and trade union support for profit sharing, Ireland appears as an excellent exemplar of 'favourable conjunctures'. Using the Irish example, the authors test a number of hypotheses including the favourable conjunctures thesis to explain the trend in profit sharing schemes. Although there was a dramatic increase in the adoption of profit sharing/employee shareholding schemes during the 1990s, this subsequently declined. The Irish case suggests that the cyclical and contingent nature of profit sharing appears likely to persist.
AB - Recently, it has been argued that contemporary conditions facilitating the growth of profit sharing and employee share ownership schemes represent a fundamental break with the past. The contemporary combination of government, employer and union support for profit sharing schemes amounts, it has been suggested, to a series of 'favourable conjunctures'. These conjunctures are viewed as constituting a break with the previous cyclical pattern. Given Irish government, employer and trade union support for profit sharing, Ireland appears as an excellent exemplar of 'favourable conjunctures'. Using the Irish example, the authors test a number of hypotheses including the favourable conjunctures thesis to explain the trend in profit sharing schemes. Although there was a dramatic increase in the adoption of profit sharing/employee shareholding schemes during the 1990s, this subsequently declined. The Irish case suggests that the cyclical and contingent nature of profit sharing appears likely to persist.
KW - Irish experience
KW - Past and contemporary trends
KW - Profit sharing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33749838676&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0143831X06068990
DO - 10.1177/0143831X06068990
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33749838676
SN - 0143-831X
VL - 27
SP - 543
EP - 564
JO - Economic and Industrial Democracy
JF - Economic and Industrial Democracy
IS - 4
ER -