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Recent Survey Results
Largest Study Yet Shows ESOPs Improve Performance and
Employee Benefits
In the largest and most significant study to date of the performance
of employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) in closely held companies,
Douglas Kruse and Joseph Blasi of Rutgers have found that ESOPs appear
to increase sales, employment, and sales per employee by about 2.3%
to 2.4% per year over what would have been expected absent an ESOP.
ESOP companies are also somewhat more likely to still be in business
several years later. Moreover, ESOP companies are substantially more
likely to have other retirement-oriented benefit plans than comparable
non-ESOP companies. While the results are in line with previous studies,
no study of closely held companies yet has matched the scope of this
one.
Methodology
Kruse and Blasi are the preeminent researchers in the employee ownership
field, and have previously worked with the NCEO on studies on ESOPs
and stock options. In this study, they obtained files from Dun and Bradstreet
on ESOP companies that had adopted plans between 1988 and 1994. They
then matched these companies to non-ESOP companies that were comparable
in size, industry, and region. They then looked for which of these companies
had sales and employment data available for a period three years before
the plan’s start and three years after. The sales and employment
growth data were then compared for each year for each paired company.
They also checked the companies’ filings with the Department of
Labor to determine which of the companies had other retirement-oriented
benefit plans. Finally, they looked to see what percentage of the companies
remained in business in the 1995 through 1997 period.
The process yielded 343 ESOP companies and 343 pairs for the overall
sample. However, missing data meant that employment data were available
only for 254 ESOP companies and 234 pairs, 138 ESOP companies and 77
pairs for sales, and 115 ESOP companies and 65 pairs for sales per employee
(some pair companies could be used for more than one ESOP company).
To illustrate the methodology, assume Bill’s Hardware set up an
ESOP in 1990. Bill’s sales and employment data for 1987, 1988,
and 1989 would be compared to Joe’s Hardware for the those years,
as well as for the three-year period after 1990. Bill’s sales
grew at 3% per year in the pre-ESOP period, while Joe’s only grew
at 2%. In the post-ESOP period, however, Bill’s grew at 4% per
year, while Joe’s stayed at 2% per year. The conclusion would
be that, relative to Joe’s Hardware, Bill’s grew 1% per
year faster in the post-ESOP period than before. In other words, the
ESOP at least appears to be associated with a one percent increase in
sales over what would have been expected.
Results
The results showed that ESOP companies perform better in the post-ESOP
period than their pre-ESOP performance would have predicted. The table
below shows the difference in the pre-ESOP to post-ESOP period for ESOP
companies on sales growth, employment growth, and growth in sales per
employee:
| Difference in Post-ESOP
to Pre-ESOP Performance |
|
Annual sales growth |
+2.4% |
|
Annual employment growth |
+2.3% |
|
Annual growth in sales per employee |
+2.3% |
It might be assumed that sales per employee would not
go up by 2.3% per year since sales and employment growth differences
were about the same, but, the researchers explain, the differing compositions
of the samples for the measures makes such a simple comparison misleading.
The relative growth numbers might seem small at first glance, but projected
out over 10 years, an ESOP company with these differentials would be
a third larger than its paired non-ESOP match.
Blasi and Kruse also looked at whether the ESOP companies stayed in
business longer than the paired comparisons. Looking at 343 companies
and their matches, they found that 77.9% of the companies survived through
1996, compared to 62.3% of the non-ESOP companies, while 69.6% survived
through 1999, compared to 54.8% of the non-ESOP matches. "Survival"
here means continued to do business as the same entity. Closing, sale,
or merger would constitute non-survival.
The final point of comparison was whether the companies had other kinds
of benefit plans. The table below shows striking differences:
| Percentage
of Companies Having Other Retirement Plans |
| |
ESOP |
Non-ESOP |
| Defined benefit |
20.1% |
4.9% |
| 401(k) |
33.3% |
6.2% |
| Non-401(k) profit sharing |
35.7% |
8.0% |
| Other defined contribution |
14.7% |
2.3% |
What the Results Mean
The results show that sales, employment, and productivity all grow faster
in companies after they set up their ESOPs than would have been expected
based on their performance relative to comparable companies prior to
setting up their plans. They are also more likely to survive as independent
companies, despite the fact that some ESOP companies feel compelled
to sell in order to handle their repurchase obligation. That may reflect
the fact that many ESOPs are set up specifically to help closely-held
companies retain their independence. Finally, and perhaps most strikingly,
ESOP companies are considerably more likely to offer other kinds of
retirement plans. The general assumption by economists and many observers
about ESOPs is that they must be a tradeoff for other wages or benefits.
While this may be true in some ESOP companies, this study shows that
in the benefits area, they are an overall net addition, not a substitution,
to retirement plans.
These results are strikingly consistent with previous research by the
NCEO in 1987 and by Gorm Winther in studies of companies in New York
and Washington. Using the same pre- and post-ESOP methodology, but smaller
samples, the NCEO study found post-ESOP sales were 4% per year higher,
while employment growth was 3% per year higher. Winther, using a smaller
sample still, found that employment growth was 3.3% per year greater,
but sales growth was .7% slower. Studies of public company ESOPs have
focused primarily on return on asset measures, coming to somewhat mixed
results, although the largest of these studies, by Hamid Mehran at Northwestern,
found that public ESOP companies had an increase in this measure 2.7%
per year better than what would have been expected based on pre-ESOP
experience. The results also are consistent with a study of ESOPs in
Washington state by Peter Kardas, Adria Scharf, and Jim Keogh that showed
that ESOPs pay employees more than comparable non-ESOP companies.
Copyright © 2006 National Center for Employee Ownership
(NCEO)
Web www.nceo.org ~ email nceo@nceo.org ~ phone 510-208-1300


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