Contemporary research at LSE into the productiveness opening between which leaves the United Kingdom trailing behind the US, France and Germany has found the key problem to be family-run firms.
This rather surprising conclusion means that family-run companies suffer with poor management practices. The report writer Nick Bloom was so sure of his discoveries that he counseled Gordon Brown to drop the one hundred percent inheritance tax breaks given to family enterprises.
The difficulty is not passing down possession of the business to the new generation but passing down control. Picking a Director from inside the family implies that the selection of managerial talent is seriously limited. This is particularly crucial in huge companies which need a skillfull Chairman and not someone that is young and unskilled. Additionally, if the eldest kid is taught from a young age to be the ensuing inheritor it can basically lead straight to them coasting thru their studies and the early part of their career thanks to an absence of inducement. They may feel there isn’t any need for them to try because they’re warranted top job, thus they don’t develop the abilities to be well placed to accomplish the job well. It could also lead directly to low morale inside a company because there’s a ‘glass ceiling’ that staff will never be in a position to be promoted above as they’re not part of the family.
The report suggests that for Britain to shut the productiveness opening with the US, entrepreneurs should think about only passing equity stakes to their kids and giving the running of the company to someone else.