A pro-worker experiment in private equity

A pro-worker experiment in private equity

From Planet Money by NPR

April 8, 2026 · 26 min

About this episode

This episode explores a private equity executive's experiment in giving workers ownership to improve outcomes in the industry.

Live event info and tickets here. If your company got bought by a private equity firm, how would you feel? Maybe a little nervous? You might find yourself wondering if there will be layoffs. And you’d be right to worry about that. Research shows that while private equity ownership can boost a company’s productivity, it does generally result in job cuts. But one private equity executive is trying to do things a different way – giving workers equity, little cuts of ownership in their own companies. To see if doing so can improve outcomes overall. On today’s show, private equity is not widely beloved for its societal costs – job losses, product degradation, worsening inequality. And this one guy at this one firm can’t solve all of his industry’s ills. But for the past 15 years, he’s been running a large-scale, real-world experiment to see if giving workers ownership can fit into the big bad world of PE. And maybe lead to more … equity. Recommended Listening/Reading: What Do Private Equity Firms Actually Do? The risk of private equity in your 401(k) Here's what happens when private equity buys homes in your neighborhood (newsletter) JScrewed Find the Planet Money book . / Subscribe…

People in this episode

Hosts: Mary Childs, Wailin Wong

Topics covered

  • private equity
  • worker ownership
  • job cuts
  • productivity
  • inequality
  • economic experiments

Keywords

  • private equity
  • worker equity
  • job losses
  • productivity
  • inequality
  • economic experiment

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: NPR, Planet Money

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