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New Data Show Widespread Employee Ownership in U.S.

New data from the General Social Survey show that 20 million American workers own stock in their company through a 401(k) plan, ESOP, direct stock grant, or similar plan, while 10.6 million hold stock options. That means that 17% of the total workforce, but 34.9% of those who work for companies that have stock, own stock through some kind of benefit plan, while 9.3% of the workforce, but 18.6% of those in companies with stock, hold options.

The survey source is the 2006 General Social Survey, one of the largest national surveys on work and other issues. The sample size was 1,242 working adults who were asked very specific questions about their participation in these plans. The survey is a project of the National Opinion Research Center. The analysis and questions were designed by Douglas Kruse and Joseph Blasi of Rutgers University and Richard Freeman of Harvard University for the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Shared Capitalism Project. The project received funding from several sources, including the NBER, the Employee Ownership Foundation, the Beyster Institute, the NCEO, and the Profit Sharing Council of America.

The data show a decline in the number of people owning company stock through a benefit plan or stock grant from the 2002 numbers, when 21.2% of the workforce owned shares this way. The median ownership holdings, however, remained at $10,000. The percentage of workers receiving options fell from 13.2% to 10.8%. In the ownership case, the post-Enron concern with underdiversification in 401(k) plans seems the likely cause of the decline, as ESOPs appear to have grown over this time. With options, new shareholder approval rules, growing concern with dilution, and new accounting rules are the culprit, although the decline is far less than pundits anticipated. It was widely predicted that rank-and-file options would largely disappear; instead, they simply shrank to about the level they were in the late 1990s.

Confirming these data, an online survey of 2,373 U.S. adults conducted by Harris Interactive between April 11 and 13, 2007 for The Wall Street Journal Online found that 13% of those surveyed said that their company provided stock as a benefit (presumably primarily though ESOPs or 401(k) plans), while 9% said they received stock options. The stock options number is almost precisely the same as the number reported in the 2006 General Social Survey. The number receiving company stock is slightly different. The GSS data report 20 million employees have company stock; the poll indicates that 18.8 million do, although the questions are not phrased exactly the same way.

The table below provides details on the data.


Employee Ownership Trends 2002-2006
All private sector For-profit companies Companies with stock
2002 2006 2006 2006
% of employees covered
Own company stock 21.2% 17.5% 19.0% 34.9%
Hold stock options 13.1% 9.3% 10.0% 18.6%
Granted options last year n.a.* 6.1% 6.7% 14.8%
# of employees covered (in millions)
Own company stock 23.0 20.0 20.0 20.0
Hold stock options 14.3 10.6 10.6 10.6
Granted options last year n.a. 6.1 6.1 6.1
Company stock value
Mean of those with stock $46,411 $32,691 $32,691 $32,691
Median $10,000 $10,000 $10,000 $10,000
*not asked in 2002

Demographic Trends

When broken down by demographics, a few trends are striking. As the size of the company increases, so does the likelihood both of owning company stock and holding options. The same pattern is found for income. The table below shows the details.


% Owning Company Stock % Holding Stock Options
Yearly earnings
<$15,000 4.5% 2.9%
$15,000-$30,000 7.4% 8.2%
$30,000-$50,000 23.9% 12.9%
$50,000-$75,000 32.1% 10.2%
$75,000+ 39.3% 13.3%
# of employees
1-9 2.8% 0.6%
10-49 5.9% 4.2%
50-99 11.6% 6.5%
100-499 14.4% 7.4%
500-999 32.9% 13.7%
1,000-1,999 20.8% 6.5%
2,000-9,999 24.8% 17.2%
10,000+ 39.9% 21.6%

Employee Involvement

A striking finding of the study is that sharing ownership (as well as profit sharing and gainsharing programs) is correlated with increased employee involvement in work-level decisions. Cause and effect here are uncertain. It could be that the companies likely to set up participation programs, for instance, are more likely to share rewards, or the causality could go the other way (or both ways). In any event, about 41.6% of employees with options and 43% of those owning company stock are on an employee involvement team, compared to 30.2% for the sample, while 38.6% of those owning stock and 44.0% of those with options are on self-directed work teams compared to 33.3% for the entire sample. These numbers understate the difference, however, because roughly 20% of the sample owns stock or options. If these were excluded, the comparisons would be even more significant.

Data Tables

For tables with more data, click here (document opens in new window).


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