Louis O. Kelso
(1913-1991) was a
lawyer and
economic
thinker who sought to
find a way to preserve
capitalism
from the competition of
communism as
an alternative within
the context of the early
Cold War.
Louis O. Kelso
(1913-1991) was a
lawyer and
economic
thinker who sought to
find a way to preserve
capitalism
from the competition of
communism as
an alternative within
the context of the early
Cold War.
His non-conformist
"capitalism" might be
compared to the
peoples' capitalism
ideas of
G.
K. Chesterton
in which ownership is
distributed to as many
people as possible
within the economy.
Kelso developed the idea
of
Binary Economics
to explain the need for
expanded capital
ownership in light of
industrial production
and the dominance of
capital instead of
labor.
In 1956 Louis
Kelso invented the
Employee Stock Ownership
Plan (ESOP) to put his
ideas into practice. In
1958 he collaborated
with the philosopher
Mortimer Adler
to write The Capitalist
Manifesto that is
considered the primary
source of his economic
theories. Kelso and
Adler followed this book
with The New Capitalists
(Random House, New York:
1961). Both books are
readable online from the
Kelso Institute.
Kelso has inspired
many economic thinkers
including
James S. Albus,
Robert Ashford, and
Norman Kurland
begin_of_the_skype_highlightingend_of_the_skype_highlighting.
Publications
The
distributive
dynamics of
capitalism by Louis
O Kelso,
self-published; 2nd
edition (1956)
The
Capitalist
Manifesto, by Louis
O. Kelso and
Mortimer J. Adler,
Random House, New
York: 1958;
reprinted Greenwood
Press, Westport,
Connecticut: 1975.
Also published in
French, Spanish,
Greek and Japanese.
ISBN 0-8371-8210-7
The New
Capitalists: A
Proposal to Free
Economic Growth from
the Slavery of
Savings, by Louis O.
Kelso and Mortimer
J. Adler, Random
House, New York:
1961; reprinted
Greenwood Press,
Westport,
Connecticut: 1975.
Also published in
Japanese.
ISBN 0-8371-8211-5
Two-Factor
Theory: The
Economics of
Reality, by Louis O.
Kelso and Patricia
Hetter, Random
House, New York:
1967; paperback
edition, Vintage
Books: 1968.
(Originally
published under the
title How to Turn 80
Million Workers into
Capitalists on
Borrowed Money.)
Also published in
Spanish and German.
Democracy and
Economic Power:
Extending the ESOP
Revolution Through
Binary Economics, by
Louis O. Kelso and
Patricia Hetter
Kelso, Ballinger
Publishing Co.,
Cambridge,
Massachusetts: 1986;
reprinted by
University Press of
America, Lanham,
Maryland: 1991. Also
available in Russian
and Chinese.
ISBN 0-8191-7909-4
WRITINGS BY LOUIS
O. KELSO
Karl Marx:
The Almost
Capitalist, American
Bar Association
Journal, March,
1957.
[2]
Corporate
Benevolence or
Welfare
Redistribution?, The
Business Lawyer,
January, 1960.
Labor's Great
Mistake: The
Struggle for the
Toil State, American
Bar Association
Journal, February,
1960.
Welfare State
- American Style,
Challenge, The
Magazine of Economic
Affairs, New York
University, October,
1963.
The Case for
the 100% Dividend
Payout, Trends
(published by
Georgeson & Co.),
New York, December,
1963.
Poverty and
Profits, by
Hostetler, Kelso,
Long, Oates, the
Editors, Harvard
Business Review,
September-October,
1964.
Beyond Full
Employment, Title
News (the Journal of
the American Land
Title Association),
November, 1964.
Cooperatives
and the Economic
Power to Consume,
The Cooperative
Accountant
(published by the
National Society of
Accountants for
Cooperatives),
Winter, 1964.
Why Not
Featherbedding?,
Challenge,
September-October
1966. (Reprinted in
American
Controversy:
Readings and
Rhetoric, by Paul K.
Dempsey and Ronald
E. McFarland, Scott,
Foresman and
Company, Glenview,
Illinois: 1968.)
The Economic
Foundation of
Freedom, The
American Prospect:
Insights into Our
Next 100 Years,
Houghton Mifflin
Company, Boston:
1977.
Labor's
Untapped Wealth: An
Address by Louis
Kelso, Air Line
Pilot, October,
1984.
WRITINGS BY LOUIS
O. KELSO AND PATRICIA
HETTER KELSO
Uprooting
World Poverty: A Job
for Business,
Business Horizons,
Fall, 1964.
(Reprinted in
Mercurio, Anno VIII,
No. 8, Rome, Italy,
August, 1965; Far
Eastern Economic
Review, Vol. L, No.
1, Hong Kong,
October, 1965.
Winner of the First
Place 1964 McKinsey
Award for
Significant Business
Writing.)
Poverty's
Other Exit, North
Dakota Law Review,
January, 1965.
Equality of
Economic Opportunity
Through Capital
Ownership, Social
Policies for America
in the Seventies,
edited by Robert
Theobald, Doubleday
& Co., New York:
1968. (Excerpts from
this essay reprinted
in Current, April,
1968.)
Reparations
and the Churches,
Business Horizons,
December, 1969.
Invisible
Violence of
Corporate Finance,
The Washington Post,
June 18, 1972.
Man Without
Property, Business
and Society Review,
Summer, 1972.
Corporate
Social
Responsibility
Without Corporate
Suicide, Challenge,
July-August, 1973.
Employee
Stock Ownership
Plan, Business &
Government Insider
Newsletter, July 30,
August 6 and August
13, 1973.
Employee
Stock Ownership
Plans: A
Micro-Application of
Macro-Economic
Theory, The American
University Law
Review, Spring,
1977.
The Greatest
Financial Planning
Tool of All . . .
Could ESOP Save
General Motors?, The
Financial Planner,
November, 1981.
Sychophantasy
in Economics: A
Review of
George Gilder's
Wealth and Poverty,
The Great Ideas
Today, Encyclopœdia
Britannica, Inc.,
Chicago: 1982.
The Right to
Be Productive, The
Financial Planner,
August and
September, 1982.
Tax Reform Is
Not the Answer,
Chief Executive,
Spring, 1983.
How We Can
Achieve Lifetime
Employment, Chief
Executive, Autumn,
1983.
Damning
Binary Economics
With Faint Praise,
Workplace Democracy,
Summer, 1987.
Leveraged
Buyouts Good and
Bad, Management
Review, November,
1987.
The Great
Savings Snafu,
Business and Society
Review, Winter,
1988.
Why
Owner-Workers Are
Winners, The New
York Times, January
29, 1989.
Why I
Invented the ESOP
LBO, Leaders,
October/November/December,
1989.
Don't Meddle
With ESOPs, The
Journal of Commerce,
October 2, 1989.
Looking in a
Marxist Mirror, The
Journal of Commerce,
January 11, 1991.
ALSO RECOMMENDED -
BOOKS
Curing World
Poverty: The New
Role of Property,
edited by John H.
Miller, C.S.C.,
S.T.D., Social
Justice Review, St.
Louis: 1994.
Binary
Economics: The New
Paradigm, by Robert
Ashford and Rodney
Shakespeare,
University Press of
America, Lanham,
Maryland: 1999.
ALSO
RECOMMENDED -
WRITINGS
The ESOP
According to Kelso,
by Stuart Nixon, Air
Line Pilot, October,
1984.
The World
According to Kelso,
by Steven Hayward,
Inland Business,
April, 1987.
Louis Kelso,
Capitalist, Bill
Moyers: A World of
Ideas II, edited by
Andie Tucher,
Doubleday, New York:
1990.
The Binary
Economics of Louis
Kelso: The Promise
of Universal
Capitalism, by
Robert H. A.
Ashford, Rutgers Law
Journal, Vol. 22,
No. 1, Fall, 1990.
Louis Kelso's
Binary Economy, by
Robert Ashford, The
Journal of
Socio-Economics,
Vol. 25, No. 1,
1996.
Binary
Economic Modes for
the Privatization of
Public Assets, by
Jerry N. Gauche, The
Journal of
Socio-Economics,
Vol. 27, No. 3,
1998.
A New Market
Paradigm for
Sustainable Growth:
Financing Broader
Capital Ownership
with Louis Kelso's
Binary Economics, by
Robert Ashford,
Praxis: The Fletcher
Journal of
Development Studies,
Vol. XIV, The
Fletcher School of
Law and Diplomacy,
Global Development
and Environment
Institute, Tufts
University, Medford,
Massachusetts: 1998.
The Theory of
Productiveness: A
Microeconomic and
Macroeconomic
Analysis of Binary
Growth and Output in
the Kelso System, by
Stephen V. Kane, The
Journal of
Socio-Economics,
Vol. 29, No. 6,
2000.
The Ultimate
Management Team, by
Chris Bayers, WIRED,
January, 2002.
Employee
Ownership and
Corporate
Performance: A
Comprehensive Review
of the Evidence, The
Journal of Employee
Ownership Law and
Finance, Vol. 14,
No. 1, National
Center for Employee
Ownership (NCEO),
Oakland, California:
2002.
Binary
Economics, Fiduciary
Duties, and
Corporate Social
Responsibility:
Comprehending
Corporate Wealth
Maximization and
Distribution for
Stockholders,
Stakeholders, and
Society, by Robert
Ashford, Tulane Law
Review, Vol. 76, No.
5-6, June, 2002.
Quote
"The Roman
arena was
technically a
level playing field.
But on one side were
the lions with all
the weapons, and on
the other the
Christians with all
the blood. That's
not a level playing
field. That's a
slaughter. And so is
putting people into
the economy without
equipping them with
capital, while
equipping a tiny
handful of people
with hundreds and
thousands of times
more than they can
use."
--Louis O.
Kelso in
Bill Moyers:
A World of Ideas,
(1990)
Channel 34 of the Time/Warner, Channel
83 of the RCN, & Channel 33 of the VerizonFiOS
Cable Television Systems in Manhattan, New
York.
The Program can now also be viewed on the
internet at time of cable casting at:
WWW.MNN.ORGw.
NOTE: You must adjust viewing to reflect NYC time
& click on channel 34 at site