• @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    141 day ago

    You don’t finance it, you take a loan from a bank on the company. If the company folds, it goes bankrupt, not you. You don’t take anymore risk than the other workers.

    If the company is dead, you’re still a human and now just another worker on the job market. You don’t go to jail for going bankrupt.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      214 hours ago

      You still take all the risk because the bank is going to say they won’t give a loan to a new company without a track record, unless someone is willing to be a guarantor.

      Now you share the profits, but all the risk is yours.

      Unless you have a bunch of people lined up to start the co-op and they’re all willing to pitch in or become guarantors with you, in which case it might just work - but again, the initial people are going to have more skin in the game than the rest.

    • @DreamlandLividity
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      -91 day ago

      Then go ahead and start one :D Good luck finding a bank that gives you an unsecured loan to start a business.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        111 day ago

        Eh, banks give out loans for people to start restaurants all the time, and restaurants are notoriously risky businesses. There’s hundreds of worker-owned co-ops in the States, so it’s not impossible to find a bank that will fund them.

        • @captainlezbian
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          124 hours ago

          And if you want a reward for founding a business but want it to be a co-op there are methods thst are reasonable and fair like selling it bit by bit to the employee union at a reasonable price or willing your company to your workers.

        • @CoCo_Goldstein
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          021 hours ago

          Eh, banks give out loans for people to start restaurants all the time

          ** Citation needed.