Introduction
Is
cooperative business a new idea? Are co-ops a cure-all for our economic problems?
Do they stifle free enterprise? This is a hot question among farmers, merchants,
and consumers. What are the facts? This pamphlet gives both sides of the question.
Read it and have your say.
Back
in early colonial days, and later on the western frontiers of this country, neighbors
used to help each other on many kinds of jobs—building their cabins, raising
the roofs of their barns, harvesting their crops, shucking their corn, and all
kinds of things that needed many hands.
That
kind of informal cooperation was part of pioneer life, and it continues to this
day in such farm activities as threshing.
Cooperative
business doesn’t go back quite so far, but it is nothing new in America.
The first cooperative in this country began operations in 1752, twenty-four years
before the American Revolution. A mutual insurance society, it was called the
“Philadelphia Contributionship for the Insurance of Houses from Loss by
Fire,” and Benjamin Franklin was one of its founders. It is still in business,
and so are seven other mutual insurance companies that started before 1825.
Farmers’
mutual fire-insurance companies made their appearance about 1820. The members
of these cooperative societies simply agreed in advance to split the costs of
any fire loss that one of theta suffered. If any of their property burned, the
members assessed themselves enough to cover the damage. No fires—no assessments.
Nowadays most such mutual insurance companies don’t wait for the fire. They
collect in advance from each member a fixed amount, called a premium, enough to
cover all likely losses.
Early Experiments in Cooperation
Mutual
irrigation companies were another early form of co-operative business. When the
Mormons migrated to Utah in 1847, they soon found that they had to irrigate the
land—and so farmers pooled their labor and shared the cost of bringing water
to the crops.
By
1860 there were 83 mutual irrigation associations in Utah and 3 in California.
Such companies are credited with having started “scientific irrigation”
in this country.
Most
American farmers in the early days were self-sufficient, living off the produce
of their own land. But as they began to produce more cash crops for the markets,
they also began to try out cooperative methods for selling their surpluses.
In
1820 a group of Ohio livestock producers made joint shipments to a terminal market.
In
1851 a cooperative cheese factory was established in New York State.
In
1856 a cooperative creamery, or “butter factory,” was formed, also
in New York State.
In
1857 a cooperative grain elevator was started in Wisconsin.
The
earliest consumers’ cooperative store in the United States was established
in Boston in 1845—an outgrowth of a cooperative buying club formed a year
earlier.
This store
in Boston was the beginning of the New England Protective Union, which had “local
divisions,” or stores, in many communities. The peak carne in 1851, when 151 “local divisions” reported
sales of more than a million and a half dollars. Prices were fixed as near
cost as possible. But the members did not have much business experience, there
were squabbles among them, and gradually the capital stock passed into the hands
of the well-to-do stockholders.
Rochdale
England 1844

Cooperative Pioneering
in England
Modern ideas
of doing business cooperatively are often traced back to the founding of a tiny
shop in the English town of Rochdale in 1844.
In
that year a group of twenty-seven men and one woman, mostly textile workers, handed
together to buy a few staple supplies for themselves. They called themselves the
“Rochdale Society of Equitable Pioneers,” and before long both their
membership and their business volume began to grow rapidly.
The
Rochdale store wasn’t the first cooperative venture in England, but it was
the first one to gain a permanent foothold. Its success has usually been credited
to the soundness of the operating principles laid clown by the founders. This
set of rules, worked out a hundred years ago, is followed by cooperatives throughout
the world today.
1.
Goods to be sold at prevailing prices.
2.
Savings to be distributed in proportion to purchases.
3.
Interest on capital to be restricted to a fixed rate.
4.
Membership to be open to all—men and women—regardless of party or
creed.
5. Each member
to have one vote and no more.
6.
Full information—based on proper accounts and audits—to be presented
to members.
7. All
business to be transacted on a cash basis.
8.
High standards of commercial honesty to be maintained.
The
Rochdale pioneers held that the return of savings in proportion to purchases
was particularly important. That a method by which a cooperative organization,
which outwardly seemed very much like other commercial establishments, could operate on a cost-of-service basis.
What Is Cooperative
Business and How Is It Different?
Now,
against this background of history, it is about time to define cooperative business.
How is it carried on? What are its central principles? How does it differ from
ordinary commercial business?
There
are four main ways in which a cooperative business differs from a commercial business:
1.
A cooperative business is set up by a group of individuals to obtain services
for themselves at cost—not to obtain profit from
rendering services to others.
2.
A cooperative business tries to render the greatest possible benefit to its members—not
to make the largest possible profit.
3.
A cooperative distributes any surplus income over the cost of doing business among
those who are served by it, in proportion to their use of its services—not
in proportion to their investment.
4.
A cooperative is controlled by its patron members, each of whom ordinarily is
allowed a single vote—not by the owners of its capital stock, if any, in
proportion to the number of shares they hold.
In
other words, the chief aim of cooperative business, as contrasted with other kinds
of business, is to provide goods and services to its members at cost. A cooperative
does not engage in buying and selling in order to make a profit for its members.
Although it may buy and sell from the general public in order to carry on its
own business, this is incidental to its chief aim—serving its members. “Co-ops”—to
use the familiar nickname—are private enterprises and therefore are part
of our American system of private enterprise just the same as an individually
owned business, a partnership, or a corporation.
How Are Cooperatives
Classified?
Cooperatives
can be grouped according to what they are set up to do
1.
Producing Cooperatives. In these cooperatives, members, as workers, extract, raise,
or make goods. Such cooperatives may engage in mining, farming, manufacturing,
or similar occupations. The self-help cooperatives which sprang up during the
depression of the 1930’s to provide employment were primarily producing
cooperatives.
2.
Marketing Cooperatives. These are cooperatives which undertake to market crops
or other products of members. Often these associations, as a necessary part of
their job, prepare products for the user. For instance, they churn butter, manufacture
cheese, can fruits and vegetables, and so on.
3.
Purchasing Cooperatives. These cooperatives procure goods and services
needed by members whether for consumption or production. Those that serve farmers
are called “farm supply” associations. They may provide farmers with
goods or services that they need in farm production or as consumers. Associations
providing consumers with groceries, clothing, or other goods or services for general
consumption are properly called “consumers’ cooperatives.” As
a matter of fact, all types of purchasing cooperatives are
often called “consumers’ cooperatives,” since these associations
are organized by those who consume goods either as producers or consumers. Purchasing
cooperatives often do much manufacturing or processing incidental to their purchasing
job.
4. Servicing
Cooperative. Such cooperatives provide technical or professional service to their
members. They may provide members with insurance, financial assistance, electrical
power, hospitalization, or other needs.
Some
cooperatives perform more than one kind of job at a time. For example, inane do
both marketing and purchasing, or provide other services in addition to their
plain activity. Most cooperatives, however, can be conveniently fitted into one
of the four pigeonholes we have described—producing, marketing, purchasing,
and servicing.