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Economics of Cooperative Cooperating

Explore the unique legal status and economic forces that drive cooperation among cooperatives, including joint purchasing, marketing, sharing of resources, and education and training. Discover how cooperatives can achieve economies of scale, specialization, and asset utilization to gain market power and improve profitability.

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Economics of Cooperative Cooperating

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  1. Economics of Cooperative Cooperating Phil Kenkel Bill Fitzwater Cooperative Chair

  2. Cooperatives Among Cooperatives is Nothing New

  3. Voluntary and open membership Democratic member control Member economic participation Autonomy and independence Education, training and information Cooperation among cooperatives Concern for community International Cooperative Alliance Cooperative Principles

  4. Capper-Volstead Act of 1922 • Persons engaged in the production of agricultural products as farmers, planters, ranchmen, dairymen, nut or fruit growers may act together in associations, corporate or otherwise, with or without capital stock, in collectively processing, preparing for market, handling, and marketing in interstate and foreign commerce, such products of persons so engaged. Such associations may have marketing agencies in common; and such associations and their members may make the necessary contracts and agreements to effect such purposes.

  5. Unique Legal Status of Cooperatives An agricultural cooperative is entirely exempt from the provisions of the antitrust laws, both as to its very existence as well as to all of its activities, provided it does not enter into conspiracies or combinations with persons who are not producers of agricultural commodities United States v. Maryland & Virginia Milk Producers Association, Inc., 167 F. Supp. 45, 52 (D.D.C. 1958), rev 'd. 362 U.S. 458 (1960

  6. Historic Adjustments by Cooperatives • Formed federated cooperatives to: • Manufacture • Merchandise • Export • Data and accounting services • Consolidated and Merged: • Reduce costs • Eliminate redundant assets • Combined identity, patronage and equity

  7. Recent Adjustment by Cooperatives • Create alliances with companies where there are mutual interests • Benefit from facilities without owning them • Maintain centralized identities and patronage paths • Abandoned absolute control for exit strategies if the mutual interest evaporates • Cooperatives are Cooperating

  8. Why Was Your Cooperative Formed? • Economies of scale • Market power or to keep the market honest • Supply missing product, service or infrastructure • The same forces justify cooperation among cooperatives

  9. Cooperatives Cooperating • Joint purchasing • Joint marketing • Sharing employees • Sharing equipment • Shared infrastructure • Sharing inventory • Sharing information • Sharing education and promotion

  10. Economic Forces for Cooperation • Economies of scale • Specialization • Asset utilization • Gain market power

  11. Economies of Scale • The increase in efficiency of production as the number of goods being produced increases.  • Example: 24 ton/day canola crushing operation has a crushing cost of $48/ton while a 300 ton/day facility has a cost of $28/ton • OSU Fertilizer warehouse study showed $5-10/ton advantage to centralized warehousing

  12. Cooperatives Cooperating to Obtain Economies of Scale • Grain alliance: reduced merchandizing, hedging and borrowing costs • Farm supply cooperatives in Colorado jointly purchase fertilizer, fuel and fence posts • Cooperatives in Kansas combined feed mill operations into a single more efficient feed mill

  13. Economies of Scale(continued) • Cooperatives combining propane and/or fuel delivery services • Oklahoma cooperative combining cotton ginning operations • Midwest Stores Cooperative: Natural Foods Cooperatives in fifteen towns and six states combined there purchasing and warehousing functions

  14. Economies of Scale • Central Valley Ag- East Central Nebraska as joint venture of Tri-Valley Coop, Central Farmers Coop and Ag Land • 43,000 ton automated dry fertilizer warehouse with unit train unloading capability • Load semis in 10 minutes with no operators • Increased sales by 100%

  15. Specialization: Human Resources • Shared purchasing manager • Agronomist or animal health technician shared by two or more cooperatives • Shared access to regulatory compliance experts-Triangle Companies in Oklahoma, shared employees in Colorado

  16. Market Power • Grain alliances gain better access to flour mill markets • Colorado grain cooperatives coordinated their rail shipments and negotiated better rail rates

  17. Asset Utilization • Unit train load out facilities • Terminal grain storage • Propane and fuel delivery • Fertilizer application equipment

  18. Asset Utilization • Farm supply cooperatives created an informal strategic alliance to coordinate inventory with neighboring cooperatives • Exchange products at cost • Minimize inventory while satisfying member needs • Enabled them to find the specific tire for a producer to get them back in the field

  19. Education/Promotion • Touchstone Energy • Joint member education and training seminars • Management training program • Centralized employee training

  20. Cooperation Among CooperativesOpportunities • Fertilizing application and warehousing • Inventory management- can we link our point of sale inventory systems? • Promotion: Do we need to promote the coop brand? • Summer internships

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