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Yeah, there's some of the most popular and prestigious brands in the history of American business, but also each of them is a family business. Isn't that amazing? Isn't that fantastic? About one third of the companies in the Fortune 500 are family controlled. We know the story.
Some incredibly hardworking person starts a business. Maybe it's a bakery or a brewery. Could be a car maker, a newspaper. And against all odds, the business doesn't just succeed. It flourishes. But someday, the founder has to retire or die. So who takes over then? That's easy. The founder's son or daughter. The scion of the family.
Who better to protect and grow the family brand? It makes sense, doesn't it? Who could possibly work harder than someone whose name is on the building? What's important to me is the fact that it's a family organization and it's my great-great-great-grandfather that started it and my dad is still in charge of it. On the other hand, things don't always work out. It's a great tragedy.
the family firm. It's a way of life. And it's a nice story. But we've got a big, hungry economy here, people. Nice doesn't necessarily generate jobs. So when it comes to putting the family's sign in charge of a company, here's what I want to know. What did the numbers say?
From WNYC in APM American Public Media, this is Freakonomics Radio. Today, welcome to the Church of Scientology. Grab a pew. Here's your host, Steven Dubner.
Let's start with the story of the little brewery that could. Close your eyes. Picture a lovely old town in eastern Pennsylvania. It's got a tidy main street in the houses built into the hills. The town is called Pottsville. It used to be a big coal mining town. The writer John O'Hara grew up here. And across the street from O'Hara's old house is a five-story brick building with an American flag and tall white letters that say, D.G. Yingling and Son. Hi Dick.
Hey, Stephen Dubner. Nice to meet you. Are we going to talk outside where it's right? We're going to go inside. We have heat inside. What's your preference? Inside. Let's go.
Dick Yingling is CEO of America's oldest brewery. Yingling, that's Y-U-E-N-G-L-I-N-G, is a name with a history. In the original German, it means young man. It's also a drawback because a lot of people won't ask for something that they can't pronounce, so that's... But we're getting a pretty good reputation now, and people know what Yingling is. It's amazing, it's me. What are some of the mispronunciations you've heard? They'll call it Yewling.
We don't care. Usually the bar owner knows what they're talking about. As we walk through the brewery, Dick tells me about the company's past.
In 1829, a young man named David G. Yingling lets Dick's great-great-grandfather emigrates from Germany, settles in Pottsville, and opens the brewery. The reason he came here is that his father had a brewery, but since David wasn't the oldest son, he had no shot at running it. So, he comes all the way to America, runs the Yingling Brewery for 48 years, and then, when he dies, his son Frederick buys it.
For five generations, that's how the business stays in the family. Today, in the Yingling office, there are paintings of all those Yinglings hanging on the wall. That was the founder of the company, David G. Yingling. And that was his son, Frederick. And that's my grandfather. And that's my father's picture over there. Great, great grandfather, great grandfather, grandfather, and father.
You don't go up there until you're deceased, and I don't want my picture up there right now. Dick is 68. Pretty darn sturdy, full head of white hair. His eyes are so blue, there's a shirt in the England gift shop named after him. These are the Dick England blue, they match his eyes. They're his favorite shirt. Are you recording me? Good morning. Good morning.
Most mornings, he gets to the brewery around 5 a.m. so he can catch up on things in peace. The stairs up to his office are steep and narrow. These are old buildings we're talking about. He pours some black coffee. That's like that radio station. We're going to play a baby crock.
Yingling beer has a weird kind of fame. If you don't live on the East Coast, there's a good chance you never even heard of it. On the other hand, tourists come from all over the world to see America's oldest brewery.
and in Pennsylvania. You go into a bar in Philadelphia, give me a logger. You get, you get eingling a logger. That's like a clement. Yes, right. It's a logger's eingling. Why do you think Budweiser come out with American, the great American logger? You know, it's kind of interesting. They, all these years, they just, Budweiser, Budweiser, but then all of a sudden it was the great American logger. Very interesting.
Dick worked at the brewery as a kid, loading bottles, shoveling snow, whatever needed doing. We really were not financially viable in those days. I mean, I remember the girls in the office tell me, I'd better go to school and find another way to make a living because this place can't survive. We were barely making payroll. But all he really wanted to do was make beer and buy the brewery someday from his father. Dick was the only son. Science.
But he and his father had disagreements about how to grow the company. So in 1973, the scion did the inconceivable. He left the family business. Even worse, he bought a local beer hole sailor. I asked him what his father thought of that. I think he kind of admired me for doing it because I think he thought about doing it, but he didn't have the nerve to. But it was very confusing for the local bar room owners for me to come in and try to sell them paps and rolling rock.
When Dick's father got sick with Alzheimer's, Dick came back and bought Yingling Brewery. It was 1985. The company was nearly broke.
He's managed to turn things around remarkably well. Nothing too dramatic. Just a slow, steady expansion, lots of hard work. Yingling opened a second brewery in Pottsville, another one down in Florida. Last year, sales were up six and a half percent. The year before, twelve percent.
And unlike most of the big beer companies you've heard of, Yingling is still American-owned. Believe it or not, it's the second largest American-owned brewer after the Boston Beer Company, which makes Samuel Adams.
equate that into market share or like one tenth of one percent. You know, we're only in 13 states. We're not national. So we have a very small market share. But we don't care. I mean, we're doing very well. So we're just
We want to, longevity is the name of the game, but we don't have, we don't have stockholders that we have to say we had a great quarter to. All we have to do is continue to grow. So you just identified kind of the meat of the argument about a family business versus even a smaller publicly owned business, which is you're not responsible to your shareholders, you're responsible to your employees and your customers and the company itself and so on.
It's very rewarding, especially due to the fact that when I started here in the late 50s, we were all but out of business. I mean, we were going the route of the other small coal-regent breweries. And my dad had a guy that wanted to buy the place back. I'll never forget this back in the early 60s.
And it was a guy that just was going to buy it and shut it down and sell a copper and brass that's in a brewery. And he didn't sell it. And thank God he didn't. Because, you know, if you stick around long enough, you give yourself a chance and look where we are today. I mean, at that time, we were selling about 80,000 barrels of beer. So the Yingling Brewery has been run by Yingling men for more than 180 years.
Soon, that'll change. Dick has no sons. But he does have four daughters, and two of them work at the brewery. Jennifer is the plant coordinator in Wendy Handel's administration. They walk me through the bottling floor, where a big, noisy conveyor system carries row after row of bright green bottles filled with fresh beer. We're about to have a beer right off the line.
Oh man, we just grabbed one off. That's all you got to do. It's like picking apples off a tree. So there's a lot of head on that. Yeah, it'll foam on you when you open it. All right. And I got my beautiful Yingling Eagle cap there. They're not, are they twist off? Cheers. Cheers.
Not only can you pick a fresh beer off the belt, but the Yingling break room is a bar with all the company's beers on tap. We sat in a booth and talked. Here's Wendy. I don't remember a whole lot of spending time at the brewery when we were young, other than going down with my dad at night when he was loading trucks. So I never really thought about that being my future. And it wasn't talked about. So, you know, I was almost a realization that each of us had to come to on our own.
So talk to me a little bit about the succession plan, if there is one, or what's going to happen, how much you know about what is going to happen, and whether you want to know more, whether there's... Because he's got all the answers. Well, his answer was basically, I am not going to retire. How old are you guys?
I am 35. Thirty-five. Thirty-nine. Thirty-nine. And he's sixty-eight. He's got a good twenty years left in him. Plainly he loves doing it. Plainly he's really good at it. He has no desire to retire like a lot of people do have. But does he do anything to kind of specifically groom you for that eventuality? Or is it more just like come to work and we'll figure it out?
That's been his approach, which has always been concerning to me because I'm a planner. But I have eased up over the years and I have faith in him and his ability to give up the reign someday to us. But for now, like Jennifer said, he's good at it, he enjoys it, and he's extremely hands on. So I don't see that changing. So there's no succession plan in place.
The consultants who work with family firms, they'll tell you that that's A, not uncommon, and B, a terrible idea. Uncertainty is bad for business, any kind of business. But the Yinglings, they seem pretty mellow about it. Wendy and Jennifer, they're already preparing their kids for the family business. That'd be a seventh generation. Wendy's kids are five, three, and one.
They now know how to go to the refrigerator and get a bottle out for us. Because I can remember doing that when we were little. My dad had an old refrigerator that he rigged into a kegerator, and I can remember filling up his beers when I was little. I mean, the hard part was getting them back to him at the couch without spilling anything. Oh, had too much head on it. You were sent back down to get him to redo it. We haven't gotten a kegerator yet, but my husband's pushing for it.
So Yingling seems to show a lot of things that are right with family business. Institutional knowledge gets passed down from generation to generation. You trust one another. There's immense pride in the brand. I mean, it's your name on the bottle. You can see why some business founders would rather shut down a company than turn it over to someone who isn't related. But how typical are the Yinglings? What if they're just a big fat outlier?
And if you're the one who starts a family business, how are you supposed to know? For years and years, you work days and nights. You probably don't sit around in your spare time reading the academic literature on family succession. So we did it for you. Let's bring in the economists.
Hi, how are you? My name is Aunt Venachua. I'm a professor at MIT in finance. Sure analyze the data on family firms and what happens once the next generation takes over.
So one thing I can tell you is that at least in the countries that we have looked at, on the accounting performance or the real side of performance like profitability and so on of the firm, we actually see drops and performance of these firms after they are transitioning from a founder to the air or the air, we see drops between 10 and 20% of profitability.
Ouch. 10 to 20 percent. That's a steep price for loyalty, isn't it? But wait a minute. Antoinette Shore looked at a firm's profitability. What if, just what if, loyalty costs you in profitability, but if your shares trade publicly, you make up for it in share price. You know, what if Wall Street loves the story of the family firm?
There is one nice study by Francisco Perez Gonzalez who has actually looked at these transition events in the US. So he looks at what happens when in the US a publicly traded family firm hands over the reins to the air. And he finds that there is a drop in the stock price by around 10 to 15%.
Okay, so I went and collected those data and what I found was what in my opinion was rather shocking. That's Francisco Perez Gonzalez. I'm an assistant professor of finance at Stanford Graduate School of Business. The data covered 335 family firms in the US that had a management transition. 122 of them, just over a third, brought in another family member as CEO.
and the rest went with outside management. And as you heard, the market did not like the family success. But Perez Gonzalez wanted to answer a harder, more important question. Why do family CEOs do worse?
While rooting around in the data, he found an answer. The underperformance of family CEOs was basically explained by those family CEOs that do not attend, you know, forget about the most selective colleges in the U.S. If you're in the top 30 college pool, you do fine. If you're in the top 50 college, again, you do fine or a top 100 college you do fine.
that 40% of the cases in my sample were people who attended colleges outside the top 189 colleges in the US despite having substantial wealth. So these people that one could say maybe did not have the ability or did not have
the effort because they might be able, but they're not encouraged to make a huge effort. These were the ones that were driving or dragging the performance of the family CEO pool. So if you throw out the family firms who hand off the CEO position to a family member who went to a non-selective school,
If you throw out those companies, then you find that family firms do as well as family firms who hand off to a non-family CEO, yes? Statistically, there's no difference in performance.
So there you have it. The entire effect can be explained by a handful of family CEOs who just aren't very good or very smart or very motivated. In other words, junior isn't necessarily cut from the same timber as dear old dad, hard working, self-effacing up from the bootstraps dad. Now, it should be said, this is hardly a new insight.
Remember Max Weber wrote the Protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism, which you read or pretended to read when you were young? In 1904, Weber wrote that capitalism requires, and I quote, a more individualistic form of entrepreneurship and the absence of nepotism.
Modern scholars have a name for this. So this is called the Carnegie Conjecture. That's Vikas Marotra. He's a finance professor at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. The Carnegie Conjecture goes back to Andrew Carnegie, who made a huge fortune in steel in the 19th century.
Right, so in his idea, he was very clear on this. He didn't mean words at all. And in his idea, the inheritance of fortunes for the second generation, the heirs who inherited fortunes, in his opinion, it deadened their talents.
and therefore it was incumbent upon the rich tycoons and entrepreneurs and so on to distribute their wealth prior to their departure from this earth. Think about it. You start a company and it succeeds beyond your wildest hopes. Now, what are the odds that the best person you can find to take over this business just happens to be a person who sprang from your own loins?
On the other hand, what if there is a CEO gene? Coming up, the heritability of leadership and the fall of an American dynasty. What was his father thinking?
From WNYC and APM, American Public Media, this is Freakonomics Radio. Here's your host, Stephen Dubner. Today, we're visiting the Church of Scientology.
We worship the idea of handing off a family business to the next generation, but is this heresy to economists? You can pick anyone to run your company, so why? Instead of tapping that big talent pool, do you want to draw from your tiny little gene pool instead? The economists who study family firms say that you destroy value when you hand off the business to your blood relative.
Most people agree that Warren Buffett is a pretty good businessman, like $50 billion worth of pretty good. Buffett is not a big fan of inheritance. Thanks when you give all your money to the next generation, you create a lazy, over-entitled aristocracy. As he once put it, it's like, quote, choosing the 2020 Olympic team by picking the eldest sons of the gold medal winners in the 2000 Olympics.
I know that's the analogy that I guess Buffett made is with athletic ability. That's Matt Magu. He's a behavioral geneticist at the University of Minnesota. Yeah, I mean, geneticists have for a long time uses statistics called heritability, which can range from 0% to 100%. And what heritability seeks to estimate is the percentage of
individual differences in a trait that can be attributed to inherited genetic factors. So for example, the heritability of height is on the order of 80 to 90 percent. So traits that are important for something like sports are pretty heritable. Consider the son of a major league baseball player. You want to know how much more likely it is that he'll also play in the majors compared to the average kid
800 times more likely. Not eight times, 800. So you probably could feel the pretty good Olympic team if you could get your hands on Michael Phelps' kids and Shannon Miller's and Apollo Anton Ono's kids. But running a company is not the same thing as running the bases. Here's Magu again. Other traits are much less heritable.
Most behavioral traits would be a lot less heritable than height, so personality characteristics, maybe the heritability estimate would be on the order of 40 to 50 percent. IQ might be higher, maybe 50, 60 or even, some would argue 70 percent. Do you know the story of the Vanderbilt?
uh... the original band about the least original rich one made his money in the railroad business in the uh... and nineteenth century and he actually
he not only wanted to build a railroad empire he also wanted to build a family dynasty he actually that was his goal so that when he passed he wanted his family name to remain very famous and he decided he was he ended up being the richest man in the world at the time but what he decided to do is he gave ninety five percent of his wealth to one of his sons now that the sun actually did pretty well that first son but after that
that the wealth started to really digress. To where today, if you think about it, how many leaders of industry do you know named Vanderbilt?
You don't know any. Even though that was his goal 150 years ago to establish his family dynasty, you don't know of any famous Vanderbilt's in the railroad business or anything. And what ended up happening, and in fact, there are two family members who wrote memoirs about this, about how the Vanderbilt wealth had actually created dysfunction.
within various lines of the family. Because what ends up happening is that the talent gets diluted over generations, just like our height will get diluted. If you look at the descendants of seven-foot tall men, eventually they're not going to be that tall. So if you look at the descendants of extraordinarily talented individuals over time, it just gets diluted by intermixing with everyone else.
So, sad to say, looks like there is no CEO gene. But just try telling that to the CEO of a family business. Like, maybe another brewery? I bet you heard of this one. The moment you cross the Mississippi River into St. Louis, Missouri, one of the first things you'll see is a giant
beacon of an eagle with the word Budweiser above it. One of the first things you'll see is Bush Stadium. This city has attached its image, its identity, and its history to the Bush family and to Anheuser-Busch beer. Born in Germany, Adolfus Bush came to America in 1857.
The story of the Bush family in Budweiser beer isn't so different from the Yingling story. A German immigrant, Eberhard Anheuser, starts a brewery this time in St. Louis. His son-in-law, a Dolphus Bush, joins the business.
When Anne Heiser died, Bush took over. Next in line was his son, August Bush. And that's the way it went for nearly 150 years, five generations, each of them named either Adolphus Bush or August Bush. The beer kept flowing, and so did the money.
When we traveled, we were allowed to fly first class. It was extraordinary, even through some hard times. There were some restrictions, but basically it was a great place to work. We were all very comfortable. And I used to pinch myself thinking, wow, how lucky am I to work here?
Cheryl Stelter worked at Anheuser-Busch for 21 years, mostly in human resources. She was a single mom. Working there was a godsend.
It seemed like every week, every month, there were fabulous parties. I just, I couldn't believe my good fortune. I mean, we always, you know, we got all dressed up. We went out to, you know, to, you know, fancy dinner dances and there were all kinds of activities. There were sports tickets because Budweiser sponsored every sport you could possibly think of right down to lawn darts, I think.
The Bush who made a lot of this happen was August Bush III. He came to be known as simply the third. One of the reasons I say that I think August Bush III was one of the best CEOs I've ever read about or experienced is that if you put $10,000 into Anhauser Bush stock when he became a vice president in 1964 and you sold it in 2002 when he retired as CEO,
not including reinvested dividends that ten thousand would have grown to two million sixty thousand dollars that two hundred and five-fold increase
is 22 and a half times what the S&P 500 did during those 38 years. Bill Finney was director of strategic planning at Anheuser-Busch. He worked there 26 years. He admired the third, and you worked closely with him. For years, I was on the eighth floor of a nine-story office building, and if I got in there early, around 7 or 7.30, I would hear August's helicopter land on the top of the ninth floor.
So he got in there early and he was extremely focused. Here's Cheryl Stelter again.
Actually, my whole goal for the 21 years I worked there was to never get on, especially Mr. Bush, the third's radar. I mean, he was the CEO of, you know, a Fortune 500 company. And, you know, he could literally be walking around. I mean, and he did. He'd walk down into the brewery. He'd walk into offices. And everybody knew what he looked like and, you know, that he did this.
If he came to your office, it was probably not going to be a good thing. His standards were very, very high. Anybody who ever visited the brewery or the brewery complex, you wouldn't even see a fingerprint on a piece of glass on a door.
The third had taken the Budweiser throne by force when he was 37 years old. He ousted his father in a boardroom coup. The two men didn't speak for 10 years. When he started as CEO of the company in the 70s, his father basically had been kind of resting on his laurels and not willing to take enough risks. And the third saw a huge opportunity to take the American market.
That's Julie McIntosh, a business journalist who wrote a book about the Bush family called DeThroning the King.
And he ousted his dad in a coup and took over with a bunch of his minions, MBAs from a variety of the best business schools in the country, and charged ahead in America. He was really intent on having Anizer Bush be the biggest and best American brewer. So by 2001, they had 52% of the US market share, which is astounding. And what was the biggest rival?
Miller. And he, you know, you say that word and it was like, you know, ice would course through his veins. The competition there was just
unbelievably intense and he thought about that day and night. The third was incredibly calculating and powerful and scary. He knew the ins and outs of that business. People made presentations to him and he would correct them if they were off by a tenth of a decimal point.
From a personal standpoint, he was equally cold and didn't have many close friends. In 1964, the third had a son, the fourth. When the fourth turned five, the third got a divorce from the fourth's mother. As the scion grew up, he sometimes hung out at his dad's office, but no one would mistake him for his dad.
His son, on the other hand, was and still is a notorious partier in Playboy. And while the father had a bit of a Playboy reputation when he was younger, he stuck that on the shelf one day and pulled a severe about phase, dedicated himself completely to the business and never looked back.
The fourth was never able to do that, whether it's a lack of willpower or a lack of desire. He wasn't at work as often as he should have been. He was difficult to reach. And he had struggled and still does struggle with a variety of issues, including depression.
Doesn't sound like optimal CEO material. No, but the counterpoint to that is that he was the kind of guy you want to sit down and have a beer with. He was much easier to get along with than his dad, much more of a human being in a lot of ways. But the fourth had a nose for trouble.
During college, he wrecked his Corvette, killing his female passenger, and then he fled the scene. Charges were ultimately dropped. Few years later, he was arrested after a police chase. The cops were in an unmarked car, and the fourth said he thought he was being kidnapped.
And then just last winter, the fourth 27-year-old girlfriend Adrienne Martin was found dead in his bed with large amounts of cocaine and oxycodone in her system. The police also found a loaded shotgun behind the bathroom door and a loaded Glock hanging from the toilet paper dispenser, but no charges were filed.
All that said, August Bush IV was able to rise through the ranks at Anheuser-Busch. He spent a lot of years on the brewing side, and he turned out to be unbelievably good at marketing. Remember the Budweiser frogs? It was August Bush IV who greenlighted the frogs, and this one too. Even his father had to admit that the fourth was doing a good job.
But the third was incredibly stingy in giving out compliments to anyone, and in particular to his son. His son actually walked around with a briefcase that held the four or five handwritten notes his dad had given him throughout the course of his career that said things like, good job, son. He carried them at all times? Yes. And there were very few of them. It wasn't tough to carry them.
In 2002, the third finally stepped aside as CEO and, as chairman of the board, replaced himself with an executive named Patrick Stokes. Apparently, the fourth wasn't quite ready for the big chair. But Stokes turned out to be just a temp. In 2006, August Bush IV was appointed CEO of Anheuser Bush.
I asked Bill Finney, the third's longtime lieutenant, what chance the fourth would have had if he weren't the scion of the family? No. I don't think August would have become the CEO of the company, but the fact that from day one, from the hour that August was born and his father put five drops of Budweiser in his mouth,
When he's one hour old, he was indoctrinated into the core values and the culture of Ann Houser Bush. Wait a minute, wait a minute. What did he say? That's right. The generations of Bush men who would be potential heirs of the company are given five little drops of Budweiser beer from a little islet dropper into their mouths before they have anything else. So their first drink upon being born is beer, not milk.
Julie McIntosh says that some of the company's bankers at Goldman Sachs had their own nicknames for the third and the fourth. Crazy and lazy.
Lazy for the fourth, who after he became CEO, started showing up less and less at the office, became more and more demoralized perhaps by the fact that his dad was making it very difficult for him to be CEO. By this time, Anheuser-Busch was hardly a typical family firm. It had been a publicly traded company since the 1970s, and the current market value was about $37 billion.
But even with a bush still in the corner office, the entire family owned only about 4% of the company's stock. You want to know who owned 5%? Warren Buffett's company, Berkshire Hathaway. Some deal news for you this morning America's largest beer maker is slipping into European hands after all. And Heiser Bush, July 13, 2008, was a day that will go down in infamy for St. Louis.
There was a worldwide financial meltdown just getting underway, so the news kind of got buried. But on that day, Anheuser-Busch was bought out. It was a $52 billion takeover by a company called Inbev, a brewer with roots in Belgium and Brazil.
August Bush III and August Bush IV, they made out all right, $427 million and $91 million, respectively, but the sale didn't go over so well in St. Louis. I mean, my grandpa was in World War II, and he drank butt heavy all the time. And Bush, which is another product, and I think it does. Everything that they do is red, white, and blue down to their packaging. I mean, it kind of represents America.
Oh yeah, I heard somebody talking yesterday that I always get the different bushes confused, but the main guy started it. Is that Adolf or Adolphus? There's a blue light coming out of his crypt right now because he's spinning so fast that he can generate electricity. And I'm not proud of this, but I perpetrated a bit of a, well, I basically had some fun at a friend of mine's expense.
She's very trusting. And I told her that Inbev was going to euthanize the Budweiser Clydesdales and replace them with Belgian workhorses because Inbev is based in Belgium. And the look of horror on this woman's face was heartbreaking. I've immediately regretted it because she completely believed me. She said, no. Why would they do that? And I just
I couldn't help myself. I was like, well, but, you know, Inbev has this reputation for being a ruthless, corporate, cost-cutter, Anheuser-Busch. Their iconic logo was the Budweiser Clydesdales, and I told her that they were getting euthanized to Clydesdales, and she believed me. She believed me completely, and it broke her heart. And it's crazy when you think about it, because why would anyone destroy, you know,
valuable horses, you could sell them for a lot of money. But it's something about it, and it taps into the sort of paranoia people have about Budweiser that she really believed me, that this evil multinational corporation was going to kill the Budweiser clodzails because of the symbol they represented for St. Louis as this like, now we own you. We're going to replace your horses with our horses.
And it just chilled her, and it was funny, but I still kind of feel bad about it. Most people who knew the company well say the handoff from August Bush III to the 4th never should have happened. Absolutely not. That was a dumbest move. Here's Cheryl Stelter again, the HR employee.
That will be the $52 billion question in my mind as long as I live. What was his father thinking? And writer Julie McIntosh. They absolutely let their personal issues get in the way of running a company very well.
Because of these arguments and the fact that the board of directors had to spend time refereeing these arguments, there was less time to spend on the actual matter at hand, which was that Anheuser-Busch was being subsumed by much larger global brewers who had figured out that beer was becoming a global industry. For Bill Finney, the story was too familiar. It's a Greek tragedy.
Neither August Bush III nor the 4th are very talkative in public, neither one would talk with us. That's understandable. It's also understandable why, even if the third thought his son wouldn't measure up as CEO, he'd still put him in that position. Because he was a Bush.
because he'd been fed five drops of Budweiser as a newborn. Because blood, even bad blood, is thicker than anything. Coming up, there are ways to handle the family business dilemma, creative ways.
in the U.S. You know, I grew up him saying, do what you love. That's the thing. You know, there's nothing more important than that. And especially in Japan. Japan has one of the highest adoption rates in the world. Second, perhaps only to the U.S.
Enterprise, Ford Motor Company. From WNYC and APM, American Public Media, this is Freakonomics Radio. Here's your host, Steven Dubner. So if you would, I'd like to begin by you're telling me in your voice, you know, however you want to say at your name, who you are, what you do.
Peter Buffett, composer, author, philanthropist. And I do those in that order, actually. Well, maybe switched around a little. Depending on the day of the week. Yeah, yeah, I think so. Okay, very good. You may not know Peter Buffett or his music, but you know his dad, name's Warren.
chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, and the third richest man in the world. But he's also famously down to earth. He lives in the same house he bought in 1958 for $31,500 in Omaha, Nebraska. That's where Peter Buffett grew up. It was a very ordinary upbringing.
Peter's 53 years old. His whole life, when people found out whose kitty is, they were shocked. They say, but you're so normal. Well, I think the assumptions are based on, of course, celebrity culture, what we've seen just grow and grow. It's always been there, of course, since Cleopatra, probably.
but celebrity culture in the Paris Hilton's of the world. So there was the, you're not an obnoxious rich kid that thinks they're entitled to everything. And then there's the, I walked to public school, I had the same English teacher my mother had, you know, all these kind of really fundamental Midwestern things. Talk to me for a minute about your degree of interest in Berkshire growing up. Well, you know, growing up,
We really didn't know what my dad did. It was quite mysterious. He read a lot, which he still does. And I will say that you walk into the house today, you see the same thing that I saw in 1965. I mean, he's just this, and what I saw was a consistent human being in spades. It was incredible. But we didn't know what he did. In fact, somebody
When my sister filled out a form, I think in fourth or fifth grade about what our parents did, she put security analysis and it was assumed that what he did is checked alarm systems. To a kid, it's like, what are all the numbers on the page mean and what exactly is the New York Stock Exchange and buying and selling and all that. So we really didn't know. Now, at some point, you've figured it out. I'm guessing that may have been gradual. Tell me about that.
It was very gradual. People will ask me, you know, what was it like growing up in this household? When did you realize that your father had amassed all this wealth? And my answer is I was probably about 25. You know, the truth is it just wasn't around. I mean, I can't say enough for actions speaking louder than words. At some point, did you get interested in Berkshire Hathaway itself in the business? And did you put a toe into it? Were you an intern? Tell me about that.
Well, you know, I'm the last of three children. So my sister didn't go into the business. My brother didn't, although he has sort of looked at as taking over the chairmanship at some point, but he didn't go into the business. So I was the last great hope for my dad. And I went off to college because I got in, frankly. I went to Stanford and I went because I got in. And I didn't know what I was going to be when I supposedly grew up.
So I took everything that ended in 101 or ology. I mean, I literally, I was just, you know, what a great learning institution I'm going to take it all. And at some point, about a year in, I thought, well, it's dumb not to at least explore this a little bit. And my dad was very accommodating, certainly. He sent me some information about the business and a bunch of old annual reports and things.
You know, it just wasn't there for me. And I knew it and he knew it and he wasn't pushing it at all. I mean, I grew up him saying, do what you love. That's the thing. There's nothing more important than that. And we both knew that this wasn't something that I was passionate about. Sounds kind of wonderful. It's tremendous. Yeah, very lucky.
What would you say to other fathers or mothers who founded companies about whether they should involve their sons or daughters in running the business after the founders stepped aside? What do you say to them?
Well, my dad talks about the ovarian lottery, this idea that you're born into these circumstances that you can't, at least as far as I'm concerned, you can't control when you're on the other side of being born. And so I think there's a version of that that holds true in this.
the odds of having a son or daughter that are as passionate and excited and driven as the founder of a business was or even the person that took it over. Whatever that might be, whatever passion and drive was there in that person, the odds of that being in the next generation, I think are incredibly small. I think that if the child is truly passionate about it and lives and breathes the same thing, absolutely. But again, what are the odds?
Despite the odds, the Church of Synology flourishes. It is such standard practice to hand off a business to the next of kin, but we almost assume that's how business in America is supposed to be done, even though, as the economists tell us, it's generally bad for business.
But you want to know something interesting, Americans are not the most developed practitioners of Scientology. In fact, compared to the rest of the world, we're heretics. So the family effect and family control is the strongest by far in emerging markets like in Asia and in South America, where we find that even the largest public firms are to very large extent family firms.
That's Antoinette Shore. She's the economist who found that family firms perform worse once the next generation takes over. According to Shore and other scholars, the US has one of the lowest rates of family ownership in the world. Whereas in many parts of the world, Scientology practically is a religion.
But why? Especially if, as the data show, the science don't do so well. So there is some theories out there by some famous professors. Vikas Marocha is the University of Alberta professor who told us about the Carnegie conjecture.
In the developed world, you have good contracting environments, you have good system of law enforcement and so on. So in the developed world, you can hire professional managers and expect a certain sticking to the contract law and so on.
It's rather more difficult to have the same kind of adherence to the rule of law in emerging economies. In emerging economies, family firms provide a second best solution to this poorly developed institutional problem.
The idea being that if the rule of law and the institutions are not as strong as one might see in a more developed economy, then families to some degree or family firm structures perform some of those functions themselves, you're saying? Exactly, because, you know, for example, Fukuyama talks about trust. So trust is in short supply, typically in countries where families are dominant. So the idea is that if the only people you can trust are your families, that means the external contracting environment is rather ill-developed.
I don't know about you, but I find this fascinating. Maybe not all that shocking once you think it through, but still fascinating. It points out some of the benefits of strong institutions and strong markets that most of us just take for granted. But there's one country when it comes to family business that's a stark exception. A wealthy country with strong institutions where handing off a business to a family member is very common. But there's a twist.
So first of all, a quick background for Japan. Japan is a rich country and not only that, according to several important economists and even institutional design people, it has fairly well developed institutions. So we are talking about a country that is not suffering from poor quality institutions and so on.
Marotra and a few colleagues compared family firm performance in Japan against other rich countries like the US, the UK and Germany. So you would expect in Japan the professionally managed firms to outperform family managed firms just as they do in the rest of the developed world.
But we don't see that. So this was our puzzle, how to reconcile this with what we have found in other rich countries. It is a puzzle. I mean, I would go reaching for all kinds of institutional or cultural questions. I would say, well, the Japanese stock market and banks and investors treat
family run firms or air run firms differently, let's say, or maybe there's more of a culture of respect or maybe the children of Japanese founders get more education than they do elsewhere. Maybe the children of those founders get a different kind of education entirely. But what is the real answer? So I'm not a big fan of assuming that inherently one group of people are superior to another. So assuming, you know, we all come from the same
you know, average ability pool. Then there's something else going on here. And what we discovered quite serendipitously was that in Japan, there's a tradition of adopting outsiders, absolutely rank outsiders, into the family in situations where you either don't have a male heir or your male heir is not deemed sufficiently capable to put it mildly.
When you say adopt an outsider, you're not talking about adopting a baby, are you? That's a good point, yes. So actually, Japan has one of the highest adoption rates in the world, second, perhaps only to the US. The differences in the US, the adoptees are babies. In Japan, about 98%, in fact, more than 98% of the adoptees are males around 25 to 30-year-old.
So this is not common in the modern world to my knowledge in any other country. I don't mean to laugh. My laugh is not pejorative. My laugh is one of wonderment. So you're telling me that the median age of adoption in Japan is somewhere 25 to 30.
Closer to 25, yes. So these are, okay, let's take a step back. Jers is saying that the reason that family run firms or the air run firms in Japan outperform air run firms in other countries around the world is because instead of handing off the company to an actual blood air, you adopt an adult male into your family who will be a good CEO and can still be in the family.
Absolutely, so see that the adoption process is rather formal, so you would have to take on the name of the adopting family, which means you give up your biological family surname and you adopt the surname of the adopting family.
And it's actually a legal process. So you file papers in the city registry office and so on, much like a marriage, actually. So let's pretend for a moment that you, Vikas, are an industrialist in Japan, and you're 55 years old, and you've built this wonderful company from scratch, and it's worth several billion dollars, and it's time to hand off to a new CEO, and your son is a loser and a deadbeat, and you say, I need a new CEO, so I'm going to adopt this fellow.
who is wonderfully educated, wonderfully bright, and he knows the industry, and I think he'll be a great CEO. What does his birth family think of your adopting their son as your CEO? Honored. They would feel honored because the very fact that he has been selected as an adoptee puts him in a very, very select pool.
So it's actually an honor for the birth family to have their son, let's say adopted by the Toyota clan or the Suzuki clan or something like that. And are these examples of actual adult adoptees then, Toyota and Suzuki? Toyota about 70 years ago, Suzuki, the current chairman of Suzuki is an adopted son.
And what percentage of family firms in Japan that hand off to a family member, hand off to an adopted family member?
So in our sample, we have about 20% of succession events that involve a family successor, involves an adopted son. So that's not a very high number. It's not like there's vast majority. So I wouldn't say there isn't a preference for blood succession in Japan. There is still a preference for blood succession. But in my opinion, one out of five is not a trivial number either.
Well, let me ask you this, then. If you say that air-run firms perform better than non-air-run firms or non-family firms in Japan, do those 20% of the adopted CEOs account for how much of that difference do they account for? In fact, pretty much all of it. So if you compare the performance of firms under different kinds of errors, blood errors versus adopted errors,
The superior performance of second-generation managed firms is pretty much entirely attributable to the superior performance under adopted air firms. Now, what about you? You grew up in India. How would it work there if you were not working in India?
For a variety of reasons, it would not work for, I mean, the first thing that comes to mind when I actually presented this paper in India is people would say, okay, so you want to adopt me, I get adopted, and then I go back to my biological family with all my newfound wealth. So immediately they are thinking about how to cheat on this contract.
Ah, Japan. The land of clever solutions. But also, a land of tradition where the continuity of a family firm really means something. On the west coast of Japan, in the small city of Komatsu, there's a hotel called Hoshi, which is named for the family that runs it.
It's a beautiful place. Natural hot springs, mountains, and the ocean nearby. Now, over the years, Hoshi Fathers have passed the business on to their sons. And if there is no son, or if the son isn't management material, then the father gets his daughter to marry a man who is. And then the family adopts the son-in-law, who takes the Hoshi name. Today, the hotel is run by Zingaro Hoshi. Hi, guys. Welcome to the house.
We're pretty impressed by six generations of bushes or ginglings. You want to know which generation of the Hoshi family Zingaro Hoshi represents? Try the 46th. Thank you very much.
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