1 / 14

Agenda

Social enterprise and the companies of restricted profit distribution in Sweden 31 May 2007, Helsinki Dr Karl Palmås Centre for Business in Society The School of Business, Economics & Law Göteborg University. Agenda. Social enterprise in Sweden The civil society tradition

nimrod
Download Presentation

Agenda

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social enterprise and the companies of restricted profit distribution in Sweden31 May 2007, HelsinkiDr Karl Palmås Centre for Business in SocietyThe School of Business, Economics & LawGöteborg University

  2. Agenda • Social enterprise in Sweden • The civil society tradition • Continental or Anglo-American approach? • Barriers to development • The Swedish limited dividend company • The privatisation debate • Legal structure • On the (as yet) modest establishment rates

  3. Social enterprise in Sweden

  4. The civil society tradition • Sweden has a long-standing tradition of an active civil society, institutionalised in the “people's movement” (folkrörelse) ethos. This is signified by... • a large number of associations, • originally connected to the worker, temperence, and religious movements, • with a focus on democratic governance, • large membership base, and • active membership.

  5. Approaches to social enterprise:Continental or Anglo-American? • Social enterprises are a new way of labelling associations or co-operatives in “the social economy” (the Continental approach)‏ • Approach supported by existing civil society institutions and co-operative movement • Social enterprises are trading, social-purpose, preferably not-for-dividend, companies (the Anglo-American approach)‏ • Approach has yet to find institutional support

  6. The “Swedishification”of social enterprise? • The Swedish institutional focus on the capital-labour nexus is yielding a local re-interpretation of the concept of social enterprise: • A cooperative that re-integrates long-term unemployed into the labour market, using a certain labour market initiative (lönebidrag) for funding the paying of wages. • In other words, social enterprise increasingly reduced to being solely a specific labour market policy measure, subsumed under the existing Swedish model • A move away from the idea of a radically transformed economy, featuring a pluralism of economic forms, located in the intersection of the three established sectors, active in several fields and industries.

  7. Barriers to development of social enterprise in Sweden • Finance • No Community Development Finance Institutions (CDFIs);low level of venture philanthropy activity • Knowledge • Little research on social enterprise; social entrepreneurship not taught in universities • Recognition • Low (but rising) level of recognition of social enterprise from mainstream business, government, as well as wider society

  8. The Swedish limited dividend company

  9. The context: The Swedish privatisation debate • 80s: Emergence of privately-run public services in healthcare, schooling and childcare • Cityakuten, Pysslingen, Vårat Dagis • Cycles of establishment and repeal of laws intended to curb private, profit-distributing enterprises • Lex Pysslingen (-84/-92), Stopplagen (-01/-07) • Stopplagen and the limited dividend company • Right-wing-governed regions selling primary care public hospitals to private companies; social democrats prohibiting profit-distributing companies from providing publicly funded primary care • Establishment of new vehicle for delivering public services

  10. The specs of the limited dividend company • The LDC is a normal joint stock company, but… • Owners can, at the most, claim dividends that are on the level of the overall interest rate • The company cannot be transformed into a traditional joint stock company • Can, under stopplagen, provide publicly funded healthcare • Critiques • Why complicate matters further by inventing yet other associational form? • The not-for-dividend status can be written into the statutes of a traditional joint stock company • Became available as a legal form on 1 January 2006

  11. On the (as yet) modest establishment rate of LDCs • Number of entities established as LDCs: 6… • … of which some are municipally owned structures (ie. not the intended ”targets” for the LDC structure) • Potential reasons for the modest establishment rate • Many of the targeted public sector entrepreneurs have already set up shop, and find it cumbersome to switch associational form • The not-for-dividend criterion can be instituted in other ways • Stopplagen repealed by new government • Primary issue: No institutional or policy framework for supporting this new vehicle • The new legal form is ”naked” without due support

  12. A comparison with the UK CIC • The UK Community Interest Company • Established in 2005, purportedly an inspiration for Swedish government • Results • Rapid establishment: 344 companies set up after one year (as compared to 1 company in Sweden) • CICs successfully delivering public services • Institutional embedding of new associational form • Futurebuilders; special regulator established • Incentives to meet the Community Interest test • High-profile support from government (cabinet office) • More advanced debate on the merits of new economic forms

  13. Conclusions • As yet, the new legal form in Sweden is a failure. Nevertheless, this is primarily a failure of execution: There is a need for this kind of associational form. • Proper institutional and policy support – as well as clever marketing – can turn this failure into a long-term success. • In order to get to achieve this, the Swedish debate on public services has to move towards an advanced (as well as more pragmatic) discussion on the merits of new – and the obsolescence of old – economic forms.

More Related