Title
Corporate Financial Literacy as an organizational capability in worker cooperatives: evidence from MONDRAGONxmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributorDepartment
FinanzasVersion
PreprintDocument type
Journal ArticleLanguage
EnglishRights
@ 2025 The authorsAccess
Open accessPublisher’s version
https://doi.org/10.1080/02692171.2026.2631783Published at
International Review of Applied Economics xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-publicationfirstpage
1xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-publicationlastpage
71Publisher
Taylor & FrancisKeywords
Educación financieraCooperativas
Participación de los trabajadores
Toma de decisiones
Subject (UNESCO Thesaurus)
FinanceUNESCO Classification
Finance and insuranceAbstract
This study examines Corporate Financial Literacy in worker cooperatives, a business context in which democratic governance and collective ownership shape financial decision-making. Whilst prior resear ... [+]
This study examines Corporate Financial Literacy in worker cooperatives, a business context in which democratic governance and collective ownership shape financial decision-making. Whilst prior research suggests that individual-level financial literacy and external contextual factors affect cooperatives in ways similar to other organizational forms, this study shows that substantial differences emerge at the corporate level. Through 22 semi-structured interviews, this research develops a multidimensional conceptualization of Corporate Financial Literacy, which includes nuances and new elements, such as ownership structure, participation and transparency. The findings suggest that in cooperatives, financial literacy should be understood as a collective organizational capability, shaped by governance mechanisms, shared practices, and the financial competencies of the broader membership. The analysis reveals that cooperative Corporate Financial Literacy supports more informed and legitimate decision-making, strengthens internal transparency, and enhances organizational learning. Moreover, stronger Corporate Financial Literacy contributes to greater resilience, long-term survival, and, particularly in contexts of economic uncertainty, improved organizational performance. [-]


















