Idea in Brief

The Problem

The public corporation is no longer fit for purpose, and its popularity as an ownership model is declining.

Why It Happens

In today’s capital markets, the model incentivizes executives to manage in tiny, short-term windows, thus failing to satisfy the primary needs of its critical stakeholders: retirement investors and knowledge workers.

How to Fix It

Switch to a model in which the owners are an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) and one or more pension funds—thus focusing governance on ensuring real long-term performance rather than on short-term stock price fluctuations.

The professionally managed, widely held, publicly traded corporation has been the dominant structure in business for the past 100 years. It came to prominence in the wake of the Great Depression because it was effective at mobilizing capital from private investors—who by the 1960s held more than 80% of company stock—for productive ventures. The model enabled executives to focus on long-term growth and profitability, to the benefit of the many individuals who owned shares in their companies.

A version of this article appeared in the January–February 2021 issue of Harvard Business Review.