During the 1970s several proposals to set up employee investment funds
were brought to the fore in Scandinavia. In 1984, wage earner funds w
ere introduced in Sweden. The experiment, however, was short-lived and
partly a failure. In Denmark, the debate on economic democracy is alm
ost non-existent today, and in Norway, the funds idea never gained gro
und at all. The hypothesis stated in this article, is that collective
strategies which include all employees, or large groups of employees,
are hard to realize within a highly diversified labour market. It is a
lso argued that pension funds can prove to be significant devices for
industrial purposes and employment, and that employee ownership can im
ply co-optation or an enlargement of employee influence. If employees
enter the capital market to a greater extent, it can also imply a new
role for the trade unions.