Development of The Co-Operative Movement: in India, As in Many Other Countries, Co-Operation Started As
Development of The Co-Operative Movement: in India, As in Many Other Countries, Co-Operation Started As
OPERATIVE MOVEMENT
In India, as in many other countries, co-operation started as a means of ensuring for the poorly
equipped citizens advantages which better placed persons were able to command by their
own individual resources. The principle of mutual aid, which is the basis of co- operative
organisation, and the practice of thrift and self-help which sustain it, generate a sturdy feeling of
self-reliance which is of bake importance in a democratic way of life. By pooling their
experience and knowledge and by helping one another, members of co- operative societies can
not only find the solutions of individual problems but also becomes better citizens. In an
unregulated economy, the terms of contract are frequently weighted in favour of persons of large
means. Those who have the command of scarce resources are left free to drive a bargain with
those who need such resources but are ill-equipped to compete for their possession. In a
relatively stagnant agricultural economy of small holders, undergoing a transition from barter to
money economy and from local to national and international exchange, the possession of capital
naturally confers a strategic advantage. The evils of usury, indebtedness and widespread
indigence which were rampant in the rural areas at the turn of the century were the inevitable
outcome of the economic transition that was then taking place.
2. After the experience of the limited success of merely regulatory laws like the several anti-
usury measures, an effort at building up by mutual association the people's own credit
institutions was sponsored by government. In the then prevailing atmosphere of economic
passivity on the part of the State this official sponsoring of a special form of organization was
considered to be a great event. The first piece of co-operative legislation was the Co-operative
Credit Societies Act of 1904, which was amended in 1912 to permit the formation of societies
for purposes other than credit. As a result, societies for a variety of purposes began to be
organized. This process of diversification was, however, slow in its pace, until the special needs
of the period of the Second World War, and the subsequent years of reconstruction invested co-
operative organizations with a special importance and significance. When individualism was the
order of the day, co-operation represented a defensive act of association on the part of individual
citizens. But with the adoption of the principle of social regulation, the co-operative societies,
which from their commencement in this country have been socially sponsored and supported,
came to occupy a more positive role. In a regime of planned development, co-operation is an
instrument, which while retaining some of the advantages of decentralisation and local initiative
will yet serve willingly and readily the overall purposes and directives of the plan. This has been
amply proved by the recent experience of India, as also of other countries, like the U.K. which
leave entered upon an era of democratic planning. The co-operative from of organization can no
longer be treated as only a species within the private sector. It is an indispensable instrument of
planned economic action in a democracy.
THE FIRST FIVE YEAR PLAN
3. The broad features of the history and evolution of co- operation in India are unmistakable.
With 181,000 Societies, a membership of about 14 million and a working capital of Rs. 276
crores the movement constitutes an important economic and social force in the country. It has
shown a steady quantitative expansion, especially during the last five years. Even more striking
than the expansion in numbers and size, is the growing diversity of functions assumed by co-
operative societies. Besides agricultural societies of all types- credit, processing, marketing,
farming, irrigation, consolidation, etc.,there are industrial co-operatives, labour societies,
consumers' co-operatives in rural as well as in urban areas , housing societies ; processing
factories; and urban banks. However, agricultural societies still constitute more than 80 per cent
of the total and of these credit societies are still by far the most numerous. The non- credit and
the non-agricultural forms are, however, making steady progress The conditions created by the
Second World War, the emphasis on intensive and rapid rural development in the post-war
reconstruction programmes of State Governments, and the channelling of state aid activity
through co-operative institutions have been responsible for this trend.
4. An increasing measure of responsibility for organising and financing rural economic
development is being shouldered by co- operatives. Both the natural evolution of co-operative
activity, and the impetus of the special need created in several parts of the country by agrarian
legislation regulating the business of money- lenders, scaling down of debts, restricting rents and
abolishing landlordism are responsible for the striking increase in the operations of co-operative
credit societies. Co-operation is in fact being transformed steadily yet surely, from a tolerated
exception into a general rule. In industry, commerce, transport and retail distribution co-
operatives are gaining experience and strength. Different State Governments sometimes
emphasize different fields of co-operative activity in keeping with local conditions. There can be
no doubt, however, that a new awareness of an opportunity to build up a form of business
organisation more suited to the conditions and needs of the times than the joint stock company
has come over the people of small means everywhere. The joint stock company is too
cumbersome as an organization for the small producer, agricultural or industrial. What is needed
and what the co-operative society has provided is a simpler form of organization more suited to
the needs of the people to be served and therefore likely to be more acceptable.
5. We have in several parts of this report expressed our preference for the co-operative
organisation of the economic activities of the people, especially of those activities e.g.,
agriculture, marketing, cottage and processing industries and internal trade, which form the most
important part of the developmental schemes included in the Plan. As an instrument of
democratic planning, combining initiative, mutual benefit and social purpose, co-operation must
be an essential feature of the programme for the implementation of the Five Year Plan. As it is
the purpose of the Plan to change the, economy of the country from an individualistic to a
socially regulated and co-operative basis, its success should be judged, among other things, by
the extent to which it is implemented through co- operative organisations. The Planning
Commission in consultation with the State Governments, co-operative organizations, and the
Reserve Bank intends to formulate a more specific programme for the expansion of the
movement in all the sectors in respect of which co-operative organisation has been considered
suitable.
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DEVELOPMENT OF THE CO-OPERATIVE MOVEMENT
DEVELOPMENT THROUGH CO-OPERATIVES AND
PANCHAYATS
6. We are anxious to ensure that in the agricultural part of our Plan the village as a whole should
be actively associated in framing targets, in suggesting suitable methods for achieving them, in
evolving and directing a suitable organisation for day to day working and in checking
periodically the progress made. A willing and constructive participation of the people can alone
ensure the success of the Plan. While a general stirring of the aspirations of the people is to be
noticed all over the country, the establishment and successful working of village organisations
remain to be achieved in many parts. Latterly there has been a welcome earnestness on the part
of State Governments for the establishment of Panchayats as civic and developmental bodies
charged with the general responsibility of attending to the collective welfare of the village
community. Panchayats have art indispensable role to play in the rural areas. As representing the
best interests of all sections of the community their status is unique. Many activities such as,
framing programmes of production for the village, obtaining and utilising governmental
assistance for the betterment of the village, such as, the construction of roads, tanks, etc.,
encouraging villagers to improve the standards of cultivation, organising voluntary labour for
community works and generally assisting in the implementation of economic an social reform
legislation passed by the States, will naturally fall within the purview of the panchayat.
7. On the other hand , for the working of individual programmes of economic development,
where not only the general interest but also the specific responsibility and liability of a member
have to be ensured, a more integrated and binding form of association is needed. Specific and
practical tasks of reclaiming land, of providing resources for better cultivation, of marketing the
produce of the villagers, both agriculturists and artisans, can be best performed through co-
operatives. The co-operative agencies will naturally have to conform to the principles of business
management, namely, of satisfactory service and economical working. That they are not
profiteering associations and that they function for mutual service makes them desirable agents
of democratic planning. It is therefore very necessary that Co-operative agencies in the village
should have the closest possible relationship with the principal democratic body namely, the
panchayat. Though in the discharge of their functions the two bodies have specific fields to
operate, in a number of common functions by having mutual representation and by having
common ad-hoc committees, it will be possible to build up a structure of democratic
management of developmental plans through both the organisations, the panchayats and the co-
operative societies. We therefore suggest that in so far as institutional reform is an essential part
of the implementation of the Five Year Plan, emphasis in due proportion and in appropriate
melds should be placed both on panchayats and on co- operative societies.
CO-OPERATIVE FARMING
13. In most parts of the country for ensuring economic cultivation an increase in the unit of
cultivation is necessary. Here again, co-operative farming has direct relevance, Without under-
mining the sense of proprietorship and the incentive to industry that it gives, co-operative farms
can produce all the advantages that a larger unit possesses. A community which has been
accustomed to the advantages of co-operative association in other vital matters of its business
will be more successfully approached for establishing a co- operative farm than is possible in a
community in which co-operation has made little headway. While the controversy between
voluntary and compulsory formation of co-operative farms may at this stage be avoided, it can be
suggested that in any area where a majority of holders representing at least half of We tog area
under cultivation desire to establish a co-operative farm, legislative means should be at their
disposal to proceed with the formation of a co-operative farming society for the whole village.
The State on its part should do everything in its power to encourage the establishment of such
farms and to promote their satisfactory working afterwards. Farming through a co-operative calls
for a number of individual and corporate virtues on the part of members. It will therefore be
some time before co-operative farms reach a developed stage. If during the period of the First
Five Year Plan, in representative areas of different States a good number of societies are
established as going concerns, we can proceed more confidently to expand that pattern of
cultivation in the next Five Year Plan.
THE FIRST FIVE YEAR PLAN