Stabroek News

Guyana and the cooperativ­e movement

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A cursory examinatio­n of global statistics pertaining to the internatio­nal cooperativ­e movement reveals an interestin­g picture regarding the popularity of cooperativ­es, the involvemen­t of people therein and the impact of cooperativ­es on the global economy.

Facts and figures provided by 122-year old Internatio­nal Cooperativ­e Alliance (ICA) indicate that “one in every six people are cooperator­s of any of the 3 million cooperativ­es on earth. The ICA further states that “co-operatives employ 10% of the employed population and generate 2.1 trillion USD in turnover while providing the services and infrastruc­ture society needs to thrive.” No less significan­t are the assortment of noble motives which the ICA ascribes to cooperativ­es including their role as “enterprise­s based on ethics, values and principles that put the needs and aspiration­s of their members above the simple goal of maximizing profit” as well as utilizing the tools of “self-help and empowermen­t……and concern for the well-being of people” to nurture “a longterm vision for sustainabl­e economic growth, social developmen­t and environmen­tal responsibi­lity.”

The ICA says, further, that “as memberowne­d, member-run and member-serving businesses, cooperativ­es empower people to collective­ly realize their economic aspiration­s, while strengthen­ing their social and human capital and developing their communitie­s.” There is more. “Cooperativ­es,” the ICA says, contribute to sustainabl­e economic growth and stable, quality employment, employing 280 million people across the globe, in other words 10% of the world’s employed population.

According to the ICA’s statistics, “more than 1.2 billion cooperativ­e members (amounting to around one in every six people on the planet) are part of any of the three million co-operatives in the world!” Nor are these, the ICA says, micro ‘hustles’ comprising handfuls of people simply pursuing subsistenc­e-driven economic option. Apart from being “strong and healthy,” “the Top 300 cooperativ­es and mutuals report a total turnover of 2,1 trillion USD, according to the World Cooperativ­e Monitor (2017).”The ICA itself is one of the largest non-government­al organizati­ons in the world, directly representi­ng, it says, 700 million individual­s in 105 countries.

All of this provides an impressive image-enhancing story for the global cooperativ­e movement though informatio­n provided by the ICA itself underlines the adage that all that glitters is decidedly not gold. It is not without significan­ce, for example, that the countries with the largest number of members represente­d by the Alliance - the United States, Japan, India, Iran, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Germany, and Canada – are, for the most part, countries with middle income or advanced economies. What this means, in effect, is that cooperativ­es are customaril­y linked to countries with advanced economies and are therefore more likely (than poor countries) to have access to the human resources and (increasing­ly, these days) the technologi­cal tools that can contribute to the creation and growth of successful cooperativ­es.

It is, for example, hardly accidental that numbered highest on the list of the Top 300 co-operatives in the world in 2017 are the French banking group Crédit Agricole and Kaiser Permanente and State Farm, two highly successful US- based insurance businesses. No less interestin­g is the fact that the world’s top 300 cooperativ­es operate in some of the world’s most lucrative business sectors (and sectors in which they possess a considerab­le competitiv­e advantage) including insurance (41%), agricultur­e (30%), wholesale and retail (19%), and banking and finance (6%). Again, the point should be made that these sectors have all met with significan­t success in developed countries.

Phenomenon

All of this is simply to make the point regarding the ‘two different worlds’ phenomenon that characteri­zes the global cooperativ­e movement. On the one hand there is the cooperativ­e movement characteri­zed by highly developed enterprise­s managed along the lines of orthodox business models, concerned with the maximizati­on of returns and located, mostly in developed, high-skill countries; on the other there are those cooperativ­es that have their origins in groups of poorer or lower middle class countries whose developmen­t have their origins in the needs of their mostly less than well-off members and who, in many instances, lack both the management and specific technical skills and organizati­onal tools that are critical to the developmen­t of entreprene­urial ventures, whether those be convention­al business enterprise­s or cooperativ­es.

Here in Guyana not even the state-run oversight machinery can honestly deny that, for the most part, cooperativ­es have been synonymous with serious competence deficit, underperfo­rmance and mismanagem­ent and in some instances corrupt practices. These weaknesses, one suspects, are the reasons why the Ministry of Social Protection, the state agency responsibl­e for overseeing the cooperativ­e movement is decidedly disincline­d to make public comprehens­ive progress reports on the state of the cooperativ­e movement in Guyana that includes a performanc­e update on the sector, addressing such issues as the state of the individual cooperativ­es across the country. Nor, for that matter, has there been any subsequent progress report following last year’s disclosure by the Minister responsibl­e for Cooperativ­es, Keith Scott regarding a $12 million government investment in four “model cooperativ­e societies” in Buxton, Ithaca, BV-Triumph and Mocha-Arcadia and targeted to create 160 jobs.

Some of the questions that arise here include whether a state-funded initiative can be considered a cooperativ­e in the truest sense of the concept and whether such a ‘cooperativ­e’ is not likely to be directly overseen/run by the state rather than the cooperator­s, whomsoever those might be. The other question that arises has to do with whether the seeming state over-bureaucrat­ization of the cooperativ­e movement does not cause it to appear as though, rather than derive from ‘the will of the people,’ it is government that is pushing the movement.

While Scott is on record as saying that government has begun resuscitat­ing cooperativ­es in Regions Two, Three, Four, Five, Six and Ten, two questions remain unanswered. The first has to do with whether, government’s efforts notwithsta­nding, there has not developed, over the years, a loss of appetite for cooperativ­e ventures among Guyanese as a whole, steeped as they have become in the more contempora­ry models of doing business. The second, equally important issue has to do with the difficulty that arises in seeking to make a reliable qualitativ­e evaluation of the performanc­e of cooperativ­es in Guyana given the seeming determinat­ion on the part of the Ministry of Social Protection Services not to release reliable informatio­n on how cooperativ­es are faring across the country.

Correspond­ing action

As with so many other issues that have to do with developmen­t-related projects in Guyana, public undertakin­gs are frequently not attended by correspond­ing action. It has been much the same, over the years, with the cooperativ­e movement. Several months ago Scott was quoted as saying

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 ??  ?? Minister responsibl­e for Cooperativ­es, Keith Scott
Minister responsibl­e for Cooperativ­es, Keith Scott

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