All three are forms of broad-based employee ownership, but they differ in cost, complexity, and mechanics. An EOT holds the company in trust for employees, who do not buy their own shares; it tends to have lower setup costs and more flexibility than an ESOP, but it does not offer the selling owner the capital-gains tax deferral an ESOP or worker cooperative can. An ESOP is a regulated retirement-benefit plan with higher setup and compliance costs. A worker cooperative is directly member-owned and governed one-member-one-vote.
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