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Co-operatives in Africa: where do we come from

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Teigist Lemma, consultant, Ethiopia. Fredrik Wanyama, Univ. ... Niger, Senegal, Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, South Africa, Cabo Verde ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Co-operatives in Africa: where do we come from


1
Co-operatives in Africa where do we come from
  • Develtere P. Pollet I.
  • HIVA - KU Leuven

ILO Research Conference, Addis Abeba, 13-15 March
2006
2
Who are we?
  • Pollet Ignace and Develtere Patrick, University
    of Leuven, Belgium
  • Teigist Lemma, consultant, Ethiopia
  • Fredrik Wanyama, Univ. Maseno, Kenya
  • Anthony Tsekpo, Univ. of Ghana
  • Herment Mrama, consultant, Uganda
  • Sanda Maman Sani, consultant, Niger

3
Who are we?
  • Joao G. Mendonça, consultant, Cabo Verde
  • Mohamed A. Aal, Cairo University, Egypt
  • Anselm Enete, Univ. of Nigeria
  • Jan Theron, Univ.Cape Town, South Africa
  • Jean D. Nyamwasa, consultant, Rwanda
  • Abdou Ndao, Institut Fondamental dAfrique noire,
    Senegal

4
Overview
  • Traditions
  • Literature hypotheses
  • 15 country-rapid survey

5
Why look at co-operative traditions?
  • The co-operative sector was introduced by the
    colonial authorities not home grown
  • Path dependency legacy
  • Export crops
  • Co-operative culture
  • Co-operative structures and networks
  • Position in society and economy.
  • Has been modified to some extent

6
The five traditions
  • Unified model tradition
  • Social economy tradition
  • Social movement tradition
  • Producers tradition
  • other South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia sui
    generis

7
The kick-off
  • British colonies
  • Protest against middlemen
  • Cooperative legislation constructive
    cooperativism (1940s)
  • French colonies
  • Sociétés indigènes de prévoyance (1910)

8
The kick-off
  • Belgian colonies
  • Co-operatives for colonists
  • Indigenous co-operatives from 1921
  • public co-operatives
  • Portuguese colonies
  • Corporatist state rural extension work
  • Big export-oriented farmers

9
The systems
  • British
  • Ordinances, Acts,one size fit all
  • Registrar register, supervise, audit, arbitrate,
    dissolve
  • Not registered protest co-operatives (e.g.
    Uganda African Farmers Union)
  • Later national unions
  • French
  • French liberal legislation
  • Different departments animation rurale
  • Resistance to national unions

10
The systems
  • Belgian
  • Non-competitive
  • Paternalist economic education
  • State interventionist e.g. prices
  • NGOs en trade unions
  • Portuguese
  • Metropolitan legislation
  • Restrictive and state interventionism

11
Post-colonial evolutions
  • populist-nationalist strategies
  • same pattern
  • more state intervention
  • integrated in single/dominant party system
  • new co-operative models
  • co-operatives without co-operators
  • co-operatives in patron-client system

12
Effects legislation
  • Until 1990s laws inspired by tradition
  • Unified model accent on registration/control
  • Social Economy model liberal diverse
  • Social Movement model liberal diverse
  • Producers model agricultural co-operatives
  • in addition integration in national development
    strategy

13
Effects co-operative support agencies
  • Unified model
  • Registrar or Commissioner
  • Co-operative Colleges
  • Social economy model
  • Different ministries
  • INADES,...
  • Movement NGO (e.g. Iwacu in Rwanda)
  • Portuguese Ministry of Agriculture

14
Effects co-operative networks
  • Unified Model
  • Federations
  • Apex bodies
  • International Co-operative Alliance
  • Social Economy Model
  • Federations or Unions
  • Francophonie

15
Effects co-operative networks
  • Social Movement Model
  • trade unions and farmers unions
  • NGOs en associations
  • Portuguese
  • national unions of farmers
  • Organizaçao cooperativista dos Povos de Lingua
    Portuguesas

16
Effects international support
  • Unified model ICA, WOCCU,..anglophone world
  • Social Economy model francophone world
  • Social Movement model NGOs, unions
  • Producers model CoopAfrica, INSCOOP

17
Literature - hypotheses
  • Earlier findings
  • UNRISD (1969-71)
  • Alien models compulsion
  • Weak performance limited impact
  • Perpetuation of dependencies

18
Literature - hypotheses
  • Top-down approach (Oakley Marsden, 1984)
  • Engineered economic and social change (Cernea,
    1985) methodology of intervention (Verhagen,
    1986)
  • Donors weak in institution building (WB, 1986)
  • Clientelism and patronage (Holmén, 1990)
  • Cooperative sector no cooperative movement
    (Develtere, 1994)

19
Literature - hypotheses
  • Porvali (1993) Hussi (1994)
  • Ghana, Kenya, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Uganda
  • Significant support, short term project
    objectives
  • No viable, self-managed organisations
  • Inappropriate policy framework
  • Coops as extension of govt ànd projects

20
Policy Conclusions Worldbank (1993)
  • Reduce role of government agencies
  • Simplify legal requirements
  • Cooops must be free to determine their own lines
  • Sufficient returns for trading
  • Not subject to imposed price controls
  • Adequate share capital contributions
  • Movement-based support organisations

21
Hypothesis market environment
  • liberalisation increased competition,
    efficiency effectiveness
  • But also production increase higher prices for
    farmers
  • Coops bring institutional framework for market
    relations

22
Hypotheses members
  • Members motivation access to money, decent
    income (not training, policy debate)
  • Participation of women is weak serves to
    legitimatise and perpetuate inequalities
  • Low presence (of credit coops) in rural areas
  • Members profile social stratification outside
    the coops
  • Cost of participation too high for bottom-poor

23
Hypotheses employment
  • Primarily employment supportive role
  • Workers coops have as much difficulty to survive
    as SME
  • Workers coops work if (a) ideological support and
    (b) market orientation

24
Hypotheses poverty reduction
  • Coops have welfare-enhancing capability for small
    traders and producers because of (a) market
    information (b) reduction of transaction costs
    (c) pooling risks, (d) more bargaining power
  • Coops can shorten the marketing chain and
    eliminate inefficiencies income gains!

25
Hypothesis social protection
  • High demand for emergency loans
  • Coop and mutual insurance strong positive
    effect on health service consumption

26
Rapid Survey
  • 15 countries
  • Burkina Faso, Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Moçambique,
    Tanzania
  • Niger, Senegal, Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya,
    Uganda, Rwanda, South Africa, Cabo Verde

27
Legislation
  • Changed in the 1990s
  • Except Egypt, Moçambique, Senegal, South Africa
  • Credit unions in coop legislation in
    english-speaking countries

28
Government involvement
  • Personnel assigned 10 to 900
  • Functions
  • Information gathering
  • Promotion
  • Registration
  • Audit and control
  • Technical assistance and training

29
Number of coops
  • gt 50.000 Nigeria
  • gt 10.000 Egypt, Kenya, Burkina
  • 5.000 10.000 Eth., Uganda, Tanzania
  • 1.000 5.000 Sen. , Niger, Zimbabwe
  • lt 1.000 Madagascar
  • ? Moçambique, South Africa

30
Number of coops
  • Not all are active
  • Not all are part of federation or apex
  • Pre-coops?
  • Self-help groups?
  • Same for members!

31
From evidence to support
  • Evidence WHAT?
  • Success WHEN?
  • Support HOW?

32
Evidence WHAT?
  • From cooperative sector to social economy?
  • Liberalisation of laws catering for coops and
    other types of associations
  • Also from social economy to coop?
  • Cf. task force in Rwanda
  • Cf. new law in Ghana caters for farmers groups
  • Coop advantage Liability raising money scope
    growth

33
WHAT?
  • Insurance coops
  • Capitalisation problem Uganda
  • old insurance coop in South Africa
  • Insurance coops as commissioners
  • CIC Kenya (owned by coops)

34
WHAT?
  • The counting question!
  • Individuals or households? Depends on system of
    production
  • Also burial societies? Edir?

35
WHAT?
  • Proliferation of primary societies deficient
    apexes
  • Aid-lobbying coops (Ghana, Nigeria, Uganda)?
    opportunistic
  • Weak primaries split sustain weak federations
  • Shift from primary agric. coops to saccos
    imitationeffect
  • No organic link with federations
  • Deficient apexes not new phenomenon no
    democratic system of formation of sec./tert.
    coops
  • Federations union coop functions (Rwanda)

36
WHAT?
  • Dormancy reasons
  • Criteria not holding annual meetings, annual
    audits
  • Some never started
  • Ownership problem participation deficit
  • Leadership Management problems
  • Viability problems (e.g. privatisation,
    globalisation)

37
Success WHEN and WHY?
  • Egypt
  • Village Market Coop
  • Coop for workers
  • Nigeria
  • University Women Coop
  • Uzondu coop
  • Niger Mooriben
  • Ghana Kuapa Kokoo
  • Senegal housing coop

38
Success WHEN and WHY
  • Cabo Verde Unicoop Fogo
  • Kenya Dairy Coop
  • Ethiopia Oromia Coffee coop
  • Rwanda Banques Populaires
  • Uganda
  • Teachers sacco
  • Nucafe
  • South Africa Rooibos Coop

39
Key-factors of success
  • Group identity associative life
  • Independent leadership
  • Well-articulated needs (individual and
    collective)
  • Vision result orientation, realise/accept that
    environment has changed
  • Organisational model (coop, trust, GIE,..)

40
Social elements
  • Ownership (no external patronage)
  • Local embeddedness social cohesion
  • Improvements in genderrelations reflected in
    coops
  • Significant social benefits for members

41
Governance elements
  • Internal accountability
  • Organic links between different tiers of
    organisation
  • Transparency
  • Democratic governance
  • Education and training
  • Professional qualified management staff

42
Economic elements
  • Commodity Value - Marketing chain
  • Market/demand oriented
  • Mixture production, marketing, credit,
    insurance,
  • Business-support to members
  • Reward of quality
  • Growth oriented (asset base, business turnover,
    profit,..)
  • Prof. staff acquisition and retention policies
  • Significant financial/economic benefits for
    members

43
External relations
  • Co-operation with other coops
  • co-operative/collaborative relationship with
    external partners (horizontal)
  • Linkages with research centres, ngos, fair trade
    organisations,..

44
Hindrances to overcome
  • Infrastructure
  • Loan recovery
  • Inadequate visibility of the sector as a whole
  • Gender
  • Lack of business training of members
  • Tax law
  • How to live with competition
  • political/representational deficit of the sector

45
Support HOW?
  • Support to coops narrow, broad, social economy?
  • What role for secondary and tertiary structures?
  • Quality or expansion?
  • A knowledge-generation, acquisition, sharing
    programme or more?
  • The facility as (a) yet another dev. partner or
    (b) coalition of dev. partners or (c) joint
    undertaking?

46
The papers the book the net
  • Most papers are done
  • Except
  • Paper Senegal 31th march
  • Case study Nigeria
  • Small revisions possible 31th march
  • To be verified by each
  • Bibliography
  • Sources (when tables)
  • Electronic version of case-studies (full text)

47
Editing process
  • Translation french english
  • HIVA does Editing shorten, subtitles,
    amendments,
  • Researchers do last reading of their text
    (approval)

48
The book
  • Co-operating out of poverty Renaissance of the
    African co-operative movement
  • Ch. 1 The co-operative traditions
  • Ch. 2 The 1990s
  • Ch. 3 11 country-reports
  • Ch. 4 Analysis
  • Ch. 5 Conclusions

49
The book
  • Publisher ILO or
  • 1000 copies
  • End of the year
  • Launching

50
The net
  • ICA Research Committee
  • Codesria
  • Scientific journals
  • The Cooperative Facility for Africa
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