1 / 27

COOPERATIVES

COOPERATIVES. AGEC 364. WHAT IS A COOPERATIVE?. Cooperatives are legal, practical means by which a group of self selected, selfish capitalists seek to improve their individual economic position in a competitive society. H.E. Babcock

gerda
Download Presentation

COOPERATIVES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COOPERATIVES AGEC 364

  2. WHAT IS A COOPERATIVE? • Cooperatives are legal, practical means by which a group of self selected, selfish capitalists seek to improve their individual economic position in a competitive society. H.E. Babcock • A business voluntarily owned and controlled by its member patrons and operated for them on a nonprofit or cost basis.

  3. 2 aspects of Cooperatives • A Cooperative is a legal, institutionalized entity that permits group action that can compete within the framework of other types of business organization. • Cooperatives are voluntary organization set up to serve and benefit those who are going to use them.

  4. 3 distinctive Concepts of Cooperatives • Ownership and control of the enterprise must be in the hands of those who utilize its service • business operation shall be conducted so as to approach a cost basis • return on the owner’s invested capital shall be limited

  5. TYPES OF COOPERATIVE BUSINESS MARKETING COOPERATIVE PURCHASING COOPERATIVE SERVICE COOPERTIVES PROCESSING COOPERATIVES

  6. MARKETING COOPERATIVES • Marketing Cooperatives sell farmers products. • These products may collect member’s products for sale, grade, package, and perform other functions. • The objective of such organizations is to secure the greatest possible amount for the products of their farmer-owners.

  7. PURCHASING COOPERATIVES • Purchasing Cooperatives sell supplies to farmers. • The objective of such organizations is to provide savings for the farmer on purchases. • The principal source of such savings will usually come from lower prices or from higher-quality and better-adapted supplies and equipment.

  8. SERVICE COOPERATIVES • Service Cooperatives provide their members with improved services or with services they cannot otherwise obtain. • These services include credit, insurance, electric power, telephone, drainage, hospitals, and mortuaries.

  9. PROCESSING COOPERTIVES • Processing Cooperatives engages in the packing and processing of the farmers products • This is a form of vertical integration and value adding

  10. TYPES OF COOPERATIVE ORGANIZATION INDEPENDENT LOCAL ASSOCIATION FEDERATED ASSOCIATION CENTRAILZED COOPERATIVE ASSOCATION MIXED ASSOCIATION

  11. INDEPENDENT LOCAL ASSOCIATIONS • People hold direct membership and are able to participate in the affairs of the cooperative. • Limited in tasks they can accomplish because of their size

  12. FEDERATED ASSOCIATION • Composed of several local associations that operate together as an integrated unit. • Bands together to secure greater power and efficiency.

  13. CENTRALIZED COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION • The patron is direct member of the central organization and exercises control through delegates sent from the different areas to the annual meeting. • Savings are distributed directly from the central association to the menbers.

  14. MIXED ASSOCIATION • Many of the large organizations are neither totally centralized nor totally federated but a mixture of the two. • Both the federated and centralized characteristics help gain bargaining power and control of the cooperation.

  15. HISTORY AND STATUS OF COOPERATIVES

  16. 1910-1930 Capper-Volstead Act was passes in 1922 which gave official sanction to cooperatives as a way of restoring in maintaining reasonable competition in the marketing and purchasing of Agricultural products and supplies. ACTIVE PERIOD

  17. CONSOLIDATION PERIOD • 1930-1950 • In order to gain economic strength many small independent cooperatives consolidated into the large federated associations. • The number of cooperatives declined, but purchasing cooperatives grew in number and membership.

  18. PERIOD OF GROWTH • 1950-1990 • This was a time of cooperative restructuring, mergers, and international growth. • Cooperatives grew in membership and dollar volume and continued to find new places in the market.

  19. PURPOSES OF COOPERATIVES • Enable farmers to accomplish more than they can independently. • Reduces farmers costs • provides farmers with products and services • stabilizes the expanding markets • enables farmers to move into supply, assembly, and processing markets.

  20. REASONS FOR COOPERATIVE FAILURE • Lack of sufficient capital • Inadequate membership support • ineffective management

  21. Problems of modern Cooperatives • Financing • Management

  22. FINANCING • Difficult for cooperatives to make a sufficient amount of money because it is not allowed to share additional shares to the investing public. • Obtains equity by selling preferred stock to members.

  23. MANAGEMENT • Three groups involved in the management • Members- exercise their control through their elected directors. • Board of directors- formulate general operating policies and obtain manager. • Managers- responsible for operating the cooperative

  24. Difficult to find members to fill the positions and have to maintain a competitive price.

  25. Membership Relations • Most important aspect of each cooperative. • Membership interest decline when the size of the cooperative increases. • It is important that the members are informed in order to gain their support.

  26. Relations with the General Public • The public has mixed emotions about the cooperatives.

  27. Consumer Food Cooperatives • Consumers form them in order to lower food costs and participate more fully in food retail decisions. • Faces same problems as other cooperatives such as hiring difficulties, providing unique services, and difficulties securing capital.

More Related