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Co-operative economics

Cooperative (or co-operative) economics is a field of economics that incorporates cooperative studies and political economy toward the study and management of cooperatives.[1]

History edit

Cooperative economics developed as both a theory and a concrete alternative to industrial capitalism in the late 1700s and early 1800s. As such, it was a form of stateless socialism. The term socialism, in fact, was coined in The Cooperative Magazine in 1827.[2] Such socialisms arose in response to the negative effects of industrialism, where various clergymen, workers, and industrialists in England, such as Robert Owen, experimented with various models of collective farming and community housing with varying degrees of success.[2][3] This movement was often integrated with other progressive movements of the era such as women's suffrage and abolitionism.

"British industrialist Robert Owen (1771–1858) founded a model factory town around his cotton mill and later established a model socialist community, New Harmony, in Indiana. Some proponents of women's rights, such as Emma Martin (1812–1851) in Britain and Flora Tristan (1801–1844) in France, stirred controversy by promoting socialism as the solution to female oppression."[4]

While state socialism was growing popular, rising in the early 1900s, followed by collapse in the 20th century, the cooperative movement grew exponentially in all countries affected by socialism and British colonialism, such as Canada, the U.S., South Africa, and across Europe.[5][6][7] Jessica Gordon Nembhard has produced one of the most thorough academic monographs on cooperative economics entitled Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice,[8] which looks at how African American communities organized to survive white nationalism, capitalism, and colonialism in the 20th century. The International Cooperative Alliance (ICA) was formed in 1895[9] and National Cooperative Business Association founded in 1916.

The post-WWII era experienced a decline in interest towards cooperatives in the economics profession, with much lower quality and quantity of the discussion on cooperatives in economics text books published after the war compared to those published before the war.[10]

The University of Wisconsin Center for Cooperatives was founded in 1962, which was possibly the first organization to collect data on cooperatives. In 2000, the Democracy Collaborative was created out of the University of Maryland,[11] which – among other things – facilitates the creation and development of cooperatives. In 2004 the United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives (USFWC) was founded, which, like the ICA, facilitates worker cooperatives (see "Types and Structures of Cooperatives" below). The ongoing success of cooperative economics in providing more effective alternatives to capitalist firms was so significant by the 21st century that the United Nations Assembly

"...declared 2012 as the International Year of Cooperatives, highlighting the contribution of cooperatives to socio-economic development, in particular recognizing their impact on poverty reduction, employment generation and social integration.”[12]

Contemporary cooperative economics has gained even further popularity since 2012, with numerous TED talks dedicated to the subject; they demonstrate how cooperative economics is able to solve problems in housing, food, and poverty that modern industrial countries have so far been unable to solve.[13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] In 2013, the USFWC spawned the Democracy at Work Institute, a sister organization that also facilitates the growth, creation, and conversion of worker cooperatives.

Types and structures of cooperatives edit

General structures edit

There are generally four major types of cooperative organizations:

  1. Consumers' cooperatives, in which the consumers of a co-operative's goods and services are defined as its members (including retail food co-operatives, credit unions, mutual insurance companies, etc.) (Example: REI, federal credit unions, etc.)
  2. Worker cooperatives, which are co-owned and democratically co-managed by workers/contributors. (Example: Home-Care Associates, The Driver's Cooperative, Means TV, etc.)
  3. Producer's cooperatives or a suppliers cooperative, which are owned and organized by producers or suppliers, such as farmers (e.g., OceanSpray, Sunsweet, etc.). The surplus is distributed according to how much goods or services the member has supplied the cooperative.
  4. Purchasing cooperatives, which are owned by organizations that joint-purchase goods or services.

The equity structures of cooperatives are therefore various and unlimited.[6] Some implement private/investor equity while others do not. Since the broad purpose of cooperatives is to offer different power structures than ordinary capitalist institutions (which are owned by profit-seekers that may or may not work at the firm), as well as to improve the economic and social life of workers and all who are involved beyond mere profit and creating products/services, there is much internal debate about what is truly cooperative, democratic, etc.[21][2] For example, if a firm is 60% owned by private investors and 40% owned by workers, this would generally not be considered a worker cooperative. ESOPs are also not considered cooperatives even if workers own 100% of the firm, because of the usual lack of democratic governance.[22]

Legal structures edit

Cooperatives may take on different legal structures depending on jurisdiction, such as an LLC, ESOP, 503c non-profit, or a distinctive cooperative legal structure (if the state provides for one, such as Massachusetts[23]). ESOPs (Equity Stock Ownership Plans, where workers own shares for retirement; see, for example, Bob's Red Mill)[24] that implement democratic governance are colloquially referred to as "ESOPeratives."[25]

In 1996, New Zealand passed the Cooperative Companies Act.[26] In 2003 the Statute for a European Cooperative Society created a specific legal structure for cooperatives in the EU.[27]

Facts and figures on cooperatives edit

  1. There are about 3 million cooperatives on the planet.
  2. 12% of global humanity is a member of a cooperative.
  3. 1 in 3 Americans are coop members.
  4. 1.5 million Americans live in a housing cooperative.
  5. Cooperatives electrically power 56% of the United States' landmass and 42 million people.
  6. Coops possess over $1 trillion in assets worldwide and over $640 billion in annual sales.
  7. 92 million Americans turn to 7,500 credit unions (client-owned cooperatives) for financial services; 50,000 American families rely on cooperative day-care facilities.
  8. The Navy Federal Credit Union (founded 1933) is the world's largest credit union with 10.8 million members, 345 branches, and $147.9 billion in assets, serving the men and women of the Armed Forces, Department of Defense, veterans and their families.
  9. The largest worker-cooperative is Mondragon Corporation in Spain, which has over 80,000 associates (workers).
  10. The largest cooperative sector by membership is mutual insurance, with over a quarter million members.

[28]

The most comprehensive data collection on the largest cooperatives comes from the World Cooperative Monitor.[29][30]

Distinctives edit

Cooperatives are different from conventional firms in that the purpose of the firm is not to profit shareholders, but to benefit its members (whether workers, consumers, suppliers or purchasers). Because parts of the cooperative movement were anti-capitalist but not as revolutionary as Marx (who aimed to abolish all private property), Marx and Marxists were hesitant about supporting the cooperative movement (especially consumer cooperatives) in the 19th century. The value of consumer vs. worker cooperatives continues to be debated by theorists, activists, and scholars (see below).

The International Cooperative Alliance provides seven principles of cooperatives,[31] each that contrasts with capitalist firms:

  1. "Voluntary and Open Membership" (in contrast to coerced/involuntary participation)
  2. "Democratic Member Control" (in contrast to nondemocratic control)
  3. "Member Economic Participation" (in contrast to purely transactional relationships and closed-book management)
  4. "Autonomy and Independence" (in contrast to state-owned or corporate-ownership)
  5. "Education, Training, and Information" (in contrast to "mushroom management" where workers are "kept in the dark," and information is intentionally funneled through power channels)
  6. "Cooperation among Cooperatives" (in contrast to competition amongst firms)
  7. "Concern for Community" (in contrast to purely product or profit-oriented concerns)

An earlier summary of cooperative principles is called the Rochdale Principles.

Governments may define cooperative enterprises with a simplified version of the above principles. For example, the Australian government defines[32] a cooperative enterprise as follows:

"They serve their members by providing goods and services that may be unavailable or too costly to access as individuals. They share costs and carry on their enterprise under principles of:

  • non-discrimination
  • democracy
  • independence
  • education and care for communities."

Cooperative economics is also distinct enough from capitalist economics in the public square that it has established and maintains its own domain (.coop).

Cooperatives, sustainable development, and climate change edit

Jeffrey Sachs, an economist who works with the United Nations, has emphasized the centrality of cooperative models of economics for the future survival of our species;[33] though he pays little attention to actual cooperative enterprises and their development as more sustainable and humane models of production, he nevertheless contends more broadly that humans must “forge a new era of cooperation on a global scale" in order to survive.[34]

Elinor Ostrom, the first woman to receive the Nobel Prize in economics, demonstrated the ability of cooperative enterprises and organizations to effectively manage environmental goods more than strictly political or market means.

Forestry and electricity cooperatives are some of the largest in the world, which puts them in a unique position to address the negative effects of climate change.[35] E. G. Nadeau provides some examples of what this means in his popular introduction to cooperative economics, The Cooperative Solution:

"Dairyland Power Cooperative, based in Wisconsin, has been a national leader in promoting the use of methane gas derived from cow manure as an energy resource. Kauai Island Utility Cooperative, the youngest generation and transmission cooperative in the United States, "is aggressively pursuing diversification of its energy portfolio to include a growing percentage of hydropower, photovoltaic, bio-fuel, and biomass"

Cooperative economics as an alternative to market societies edit

Jessica Gordon Nembhard in her monograph Collective Courage concludes that:

…cooperatives…use a sense of solidarity and concern for community to promote economic alternatives that create economic growth and sustainability. At the same time, their solidarity and collective action increase productivity and help stabilize their economic circumstances. Moreover, cooperative economics is often viewed as a tool or strategy of a larger movement toward the elimination of economic exploitation and the transition to a new social order.[8]

Relevant organizations edit

National and international cooperative associations edit

Cooperative organizations edit

Cooperative funding and finance edit

Major figures edit

Notable theoreticians and activists who have contributed to the field include Robert Owen,[61] Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Charles Gide,[62] Beatrice and Sydney Webb,[63] J.T.W. Mitchell, Peter Kropotkin,[64] Paul Lambert,[65] Race Mathews,[66] David Griffiths,[67] and G.D.H. Cole.[68] Additional theorists include John Stuart Mill, Laurence Gronlund, Leland Stanford,[69][70] and modern theoretical work by Elinor Ostrom,[71] Benjamin Ward,[72] Jaroslav Vanek,[73] David Ellerman,[74] and Anna Milford[75] and Roger McCain.[76] Additional modern thinkers include Nathan Schneider, John Restakis, Joyce Rothschild,[77] Joerg Rieger, Rosemarie Henkel-Rieger, Jessica Gordon Nembhard,[78] Corey Rosen et al.,[79] William Foote Whyte,[80] Gar Alperovitz,[81] Seymour Melman,[82] Mario Bunge, Richard D. Wolff and David Schweickart.[83] In Europe, important contributions came from England and Italy, especially from Will Bartlett,[84] Virginie Perotin,[85] Bruno Jossa,[86] Stefano Zamagni,[87] Carlo Borzaga,[88] Jacques Defourny[89] and Tom Winters.[90]

Co-operative federalism versus co-operative individualism edit

A major historical debate in co-operative economics has been between co-operative federalism and co-operative individualism. In an Owenite village of cooperation or a commune, the residents would be both the producers and consumers of its products. However, for co-operative enterprise other than communes, the producers and consumers of its products are two different groups of people, and usually only one of these groups is given the status of members (or co-owners).

The differences in goals, purpose, and power between worker and consumer cooperatives has led to a debate between those who support consumer co-operatives (known as co-operative federalists) and those who favor worker co-operatives (pejoratively labelled 'individualist' co-operativists by the federalists[91]).[92]

Co-operative federalism edit

Co-operative federalism is the school of thought favouring consumer co-operative societies. Historically, its proponents have included JTW Mitchell and Charles Gide, as well as Paul Lambert and Beatrice Webb. Co-operative federalists argue that consumers should form co-operative wholesale societies (co-operative federations in which all members are co-operators, the best historical example of which being CWS in the United Kingdom), and that these co-operative wholesale societies should undertake purchasing farms or factories. They argue that profits (or surpluses) from these co-operative wholesale societies should be paid as dividends to the member co-operators, rather than to their workers.[93]

Co-operative individualism edit

Co-operative individualism is the school of thought favouring workers' co-operatives. The most notable proponents of workers' co-operatives are, in Britain, the Christian socialists and later writers like Joseph Reeves who put this forth as a path to state socialism.[94] Where co-operative federalists argue for federations in which consumer co-operators federate and receive the monetary dividends, rather, in co-operative wholesale societies the profits (or surpluses) would be paid as dividends to their workers.[93] The Mondragón Co-operatives in Spain are commonly cited by co-operative individualists and a lot of co-operative individualist literature deals with these societies. The Mondragón Cooperative Corporation has drawn so much attention because in 2010 it was the seventh-largest company in Spain. It consists of about 250 different worker cooperative businesses. The business model they use includes "extensive integration and solidarity with employees", worker involvement in policy and committees, a "transparent" wage system, and "full practice of democratic control".[95] These two schools of thought are not necessarily in opposition, and hybrids of the two positions are possible.[93]

James Warbasse's work,[96] and more recently Johnston Birchall's,[97] provide perspectives on the breadth of co-operative development nationally and internationally. Benjamin Ward provided a formal treatment to begin an evaluation of "market syndicalism." Jaroslav Vanek wrote a comprehensive work in an attempt to address cooperativism in economic terms and a "labor-managed economy."[98] David Ellerman began by considering legal philosophic aspects of co-operatives, developing the "labor theory of property."[99] In 2007 he used the classical economic premise in formulating his argument deconstructing the myth of capital rights to ownership.[100] Anna Milford has constructed a detailed theoretical examination of co-operatives in controlled buyer markets (monopsony), and the implications for fair trade strategies.[101]

Other schools edit

Socialism and anarchism edit

Socialists and anarchists, such as anarcho-communists and anarcho-syndicalists, view society as one big cooperative, and feel that goods produced by all should be distributed equitably to all members of the society, not necessarily through a market. All the members of a society are considered to be both producers and consumers. State socialists tend to favor government administration of the economy, while anarchists and libertarian socialists favor non-governmental coordination, either locally, or through labor unions and worker cooperatives. Although there is some debate as Bakunin and the collectivists favored market distribution using currency, collectivizing production, not consumption. Left libertarians collectivize neither but define their leftness as inalienable rights to the commons, not collective ownership of it, thus rejecting Lockean homesteading.

Utopian socialists feel socialism can be achieved without class struggle and that cooperatives should only include those who voluntarily choose to participate in them. Some participants in the kibbutz movement and other intentional communities fall into this category.

Co-operative commonwealth edit

In some co-operative economics literature, the aim is the achievement of a co-operative commonwealth, a society based on cooperative and socialist principles. Co-operative economists – federalist, individualist, and otherwise – have presented the extension of their economic model to its natural limits as a goal.

This ideal was widely supported in early-twentieth century U.S. and Canadian leftist circles. This ideal, and the language behind it, were central to the formation of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation party in 1932, which became Canada's largest left-wing political party, and continues to this day as the New Democratic Party. They were also important to the economic principles of the Farmer-Labor Party of the United States, particularly in the FLP's Minnesota affiliate, where advocacy for a co-operative commonwealth formed the central theme of the party's platform from 1934, until the Minnesota FLP merged with the state Democratic Party to form the Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party in 1944.

Co-operative commonwealth ideas were also developed in Great Britain and Ireland from the 1880s by William Morris, which also inspired the guild socialist movement for associative democracy from 1906 right through the 1920s. Guild socialist thinkers included Bertrand Russell, R. H. Tawney and G. D. H. Cole.

Employee ownership edit

Some economists have argued that economic democracy could be achieved by combining employee ownership on a national scale (including worker cooperatives) within a free market apparatus. Tom Winters argues that "as with the free market more generally, it is not free trade itself that creates inequality, it’s how free trade is used, who benefits from it and who does not."[102]

Cooperative microeconomics edit

According to Hervé Moulin, cooperation from a game-theoretic point of view ("in the economic tradition") is the mutual assistance between egoists. He distinguishes three modes of such cooperation:

  1. decentralised behaviour, where the collective outcome results from the strategic decisions of selfish agents;
  2. arbitration (by a mechanical formula or benevolent dictator) about actions on the basis of normative principles;
  3. direct agreement between agents after face-to-face bargaining.

These modes are present in every cooperative institution but their virtues are often logically incompatible.[103]

See also edit

References edit

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  101. ^ Milford, A. (2004) "Coffee, Cooperatives, Competition: The Impact of Fair Trade," Chr Michelsen Institute
  102. ^ Winters, Tom (2018) The Cooperative State: The Case for Employee Ownership on a National Scale. p.200. ISBN 978-1726628839,
  103. ^ Moulin, Hervé (1995). Cooperative Microeconomics: a Game-Theoretic Introduction. Princeton, N.J. and Chichester, West Sussex: Princeton University Press. pp. 4, 5, 11. ISBN 0-691-03481-8.

Further reading edit

  • , by Charles Gide, 1922
  • , published monthly by The Co-operative League of America
  • , by George Jacob Holyoake, 1908
  • Cooperative Peace 2014-10-20 at the Wayback Machine, by James Peter Warbasse, 1950
  • , by James Peter Warbasse, 1941
  • Why Co-ops? What Are They? How Do They Work? A pamphlet from the G.I. Roundtable series by Joseph G. Knapp, 1944
  • , by Legal Firm Stoel Rives, Seattle
  • For All The People: Uncovering the Hidden History of Cooperation, Cooperative Movements, and Communalism in America, PM Press, by John Curl, 2009
  • Humanizing The Economy: Cooperatives in an Age of Capital, New Society Publishers, 2010
  • The Cooperative Solution, by E. G. Nadeau, 2012. A popular and contemporary introduction to cooperative economics.
  • , Pat Conaty 2013
  • The Cooperative State: The Case for Employee Ownership on a National Scale, by Tom Winters, 2018
  • , edited by Pat Conaty and Martin Large, 2013
  • Everything for Everyone: The Radical Tradition That is Shaping the Next Economy, Nathan Schneider, Bold Type Books, 2018
  • The Economics of Financial Cooperatives: Income Distribution, Political Economy and Regulation, by Amr Khafagy, 2019

operative, economics, cooperative, operative, economics, field, economics, that, incorporates, cooperative, studies, political, economy, toward, study, management, cooperatives, contents, history, types, structures, cooperatives, general, structures, legal, st. Cooperative or co operative economics is a field of economics that incorporates cooperative studies and political economy toward the study and management of cooperatives 1 Contents 1 History 2 Types and structures of cooperatives 2 1 General structures 2 2 Legal structures 3 Facts and figures on cooperatives 4 Distinctives 4 1 Cooperatives sustainable development and climate change 4 2 Cooperative economics as an alternative to market societies 5 Relevant organizations 5 1 National and international cooperative associations 5 2 Cooperative organizations 5 3 Cooperative funding and finance 6 Major figures 7 Co operative federalism versus co operative individualism 7 1 Co operative federalism 7 2 Co operative individualism 8 Other schools 8 1 Socialism and anarchism 8 2 Co operative commonwealth 8 3 Employee ownership 9 Cooperative microeconomics 10 See also 11 References 12 Further readingHistory editSee also History of the cooperative movementCooperative economics developed as both a theory and a concrete alternative to industrial capitalism in the late 1700s and early 1800s As such it was a form of stateless socialism The term socialism in fact was coined in The Cooperative Magazine in 1827 2 Such socialisms arose in response to the negative effects of industrialism where various clergymen workers and industrialists in England such as Robert Owen experimented with various models of collective farming and community housing with varying degrees of success 2 3 This movement was often integrated with other progressive movements of the era such as women s suffrage and abolitionism British industrialist Robert Owen 1771 1858 founded a model factory town around his cotton mill and later established a model socialist community New Harmony in Indiana Some proponents of women s rights such as Emma Martin 1812 1851 in Britain and Flora Tristan 1801 1844 in France stirred controversy by promoting socialism as the solution to female oppression 4 While state socialism was growing popular rising in the early 1900s followed by collapse in the 20th century the cooperative movement grew exponentially in all countries affected by socialism and British colonialism such as Canada the U S South Africa and across Europe 5 6 7 Jessica Gordon Nembhard has produced one of the most thorough academic monographs on cooperative economics entitled Collective Courage A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice 8 which looks at how African American communities organized to survive white nationalism capitalism and colonialism in the 20th century The International Cooperative Alliance ICA was formed in 1895 9 and National Cooperative Business Association founded in 1916 The post WWII era experienced a decline in interest towards cooperatives in the economics profession with much lower quality and quantity of the discussion on cooperatives in economics text books published after the war compared to those published before the war 10 The University of Wisconsin Center for Cooperatives was founded in 1962 which was possibly the first organization to collect data on cooperatives In 2000 the Democracy Collaborative was created out of the University of Maryland 11 which among other things facilitates the creation and development of cooperatives In 2004 the United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives USFWC was founded which like the ICA facilitates worker cooperatives see Types and Structures of Cooperatives below The ongoing success of cooperative economics in providing more effective alternatives to capitalist firms was so significant by the 21st century that the United Nations Assembly declared 2012 as the International Year of Cooperatives highlighting the contribution of cooperatives to socio economic development in particular recognizing their impact on poverty reduction employment generation and social integration 12 Contemporary cooperative economics has gained even further popularity since 2012 with numerous TED talks dedicated to the subject they demonstrate how cooperative economics is able to solve problems in housing food and poverty that modern industrial countries have so far been unable to solve 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 In 2013 the USFWC spawned the Democracy at Work Institute a sister organization that also facilitates the growth creation and conversion of worker cooperatives Types and structures of cooperatives editGeneral structures edit There are generally four major types of cooperative organizations Consumers cooperatives in which the consumers of a co operative s goods and services are defined as its members including retail food co operatives credit unions mutual insurance companies etc Example REI federal credit unions etc Worker cooperatives which are co owned and democratically co managed by workers contributors Example Home Care Associates The Driver s Cooperative Means TV etc Producer s cooperatives or a suppliers cooperative which are owned and organized by producers or suppliers such as farmers e g OceanSpray Sunsweet etc The surplus is distributed according to how much goods or services the member has supplied the cooperative Purchasing cooperatives which are owned by organizations that joint purchase goods or services The equity structures of cooperatives are therefore various and unlimited 6 Some implement private investor equity while others do not Since the broad purpose of cooperatives is to offer different power structures than ordinary capitalist institutions which are owned by profit seekers that may or may not work at the firm as well as to improve the economic and social life of workers and all who are involved beyond mere profit and creating products services there is much internal debate about what is truly cooperative democratic etc 21 2 For example if a firm is 60 owned by private investors and 40 owned by workers this would generally not be considered a worker cooperative ESOPs are also not considered cooperatives even if workers own 100 of the firm because of the usual lack of democratic governance 22 Legal structures edit Cooperatives may take on different legal structures depending on jurisdiction such as an LLC ESOP 503c non profit or a distinctive cooperative legal structure if the state provides for one such as Massachusetts 23 ESOPs Equity Stock Ownership Plans where workers own shares for retirement see for example Bob s Red Mill 24 that implement democratic governance are colloquially referred to as ESOPeratives 25 In 1996 New Zealand passed the Cooperative Companies Act 26 In 2003 the Statute for a European Cooperative Society created a specific legal structure for cooperatives in the EU 27 Facts and figures on cooperatives editThere are about 3 million cooperatives on the planet 12 of global humanity is a member of a cooperative 1 in 3 Americans are coop members 1 5 million Americans live in a housing cooperative Cooperatives electrically power 56 of the United States landmass and 42 million people Coops possess over 1 trillion in assets worldwide and over 640 billion in annual sales 92 million Americans turn to 7 500 credit unions client owned cooperatives for financial services 50 000 American families rely on cooperative day care facilities The Navy Federal Credit Union founded 1933 is the world s largest credit union with 10 8 million members 345 branches and 147 9 billion in assets serving the men and women of the Armed Forces Department of Defense veterans and their families The largest worker cooperative is Mondragon Corporation in Spain which has over 80 000 associates workers The largest cooperative sector by membership is mutual insurance with over a quarter million members 28 The most comprehensive data collection on the largest cooperatives comes from the World Cooperative Monitor 29 30 Distinctives editCooperatives are different from conventional firms in that the purpose of the firm is not to profit shareholders but to benefit its members whether workers consumers suppliers or purchasers Because parts of the cooperative movement were anti capitalist but not as revolutionary as Marx who aimed to abolish all private property Marx and Marxists were hesitant about supporting the cooperative movement especially consumer cooperatives in the 19th century The value of consumer vs worker cooperatives continues to be debated by theorists activists and scholars see below The International Cooperative Alliance provides seven principles of cooperatives 31 each that contrasts with capitalist firms Voluntary and Open Membership in contrast to coerced involuntary participation Democratic Member Control in contrast to nondemocratic control Member Economic Participation in contrast to purely transactional relationships and closed book management Autonomy and Independence in contrast to state owned or corporate ownership Education Training and Information in contrast to mushroom management where workers are kept in the dark and information is intentionally funneled through power channels Cooperation among Cooperatives in contrast to competition amongst firms Concern for Community in contrast to purely product or profit oriented concerns An earlier summary of cooperative principles is called the Rochdale Principles Governments may define cooperative enterprises with a simplified version of the above principles For example the Australian government defines 32 a cooperative enterprise as follows They serve their members by providing goods and services that may be unavailable or too costly to access as individuals They share costs and carry on their enterprise under principles of non discrimination democracy independence education and care for communities Cooperative economics is also distinct enough from capitalist economics in the public square that it has established and maintains its own domain coop Cooperatives sustainable development and climate change edit Jeffrey Sachs an economist who works with the United Nations has emphasized the centrality of cooperative models of economics for the future survival of our species 33 though he pays little attention to actual cooperative enterprises and their development as more sustainable and humane models of production he nevertheless contends more broadly that humans must forge a new era of cooperation on a global scale in order to survive 34 Elinor Ostrom the first woman to receive the Nobel Prize in economics demonstrated the ability of cooperative enterprises and organizations to effectively manage environmental goods more than strictly political or market means Forestry and electricity cooperatives are some of the largest in the world which puts them in a unique position to address the negative effects of climate change 35 E G Nadeau provides some examples of what this means in his popular introduction to cooperative economics The Cooperative Solution Dairyland Power Cooperative based in Wisconsin has been a national leader in promoting the use of methane gas derived from cow manure as an energy resource Kauai Island Utility Cooperative the youngest generation and transmission cooperative in the United States is aggressively pursuing diversification of its energy portfolio to include a growing percentage of hydropower photovoltaic bio fuel and biomass Cooperative economics as an alternative to market societies editJessica Gordon Nembhard in her monograph Collective Courage concludes that cooperatives use a sense of solidarity and concern for community to promote economic alternatives that create economic growth and sustainability At the same time their solidarity and collective action increase productivity and help stabilize their economic circumstances Moreover cooperative economics is often viewed as a tool or strategy of a larger movement toward the elimination of economic exploitation and the transition to a new social order 8 Relevant organizations editThis section s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message National and international cooperative associations edit International Cooperative Alliance 36 United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives 37 Canadian Worker Coop Federation 38 Cooperatives UK 39 Co Op Federation Australia 40 National Cooperative Business Association 41 National Association of Housing Cooperatives 42 National Cooperative Grocers AssociationCooperative organizations edit Democracy at Work 43 Cooperation Jackson 44 Grassroots Economic Organizing 45 Jobs With Justice 46 Platform Cooperativism Consortium 47 Purpose 48 The Institute for Christian Socialism 49 The Southeast Center for Cooperative Development 50 The Working World 51 The New Economy Coalition 52 Zebras Unite 53 Cooperative funding and finance edit Community Wealth 54 National Consumer Cooperative Bank Association of Corporate Credit Unions Cooperative Finance Corporation Federal Home Loan Bank System Community Purchasing Alliance 55 Capital Impact 56 Cooperative Development Foundation 57 Seed Commons 58 Shared Capital Cooperative 59 Transform Finance 60 Major figures editNotable theoreticians and activists who have contributed to the field include Robert Owen 61 Pierre Joseph Proudhon Charles Gide 62 Beatrice and Sydney Webb 63 J T W Mitchell Peter Kropotkin 64 Paul Lambert 65 Race Mathews 66 David Griffiths 67 and G D H Cole 68 Additional theorists include John Stuart Mill Laurence Gronlund Leland Stanford 69 70 and modern theoretical work by Elinor Ostrom 71 Benjamin Ward 72 Jaroslav Vanek 73 David Ellerman 74 and Anna Milford 75 and Roger McCain 76 Additional modern thinkers include Nathan Schneider John Restakis Joyce Rothschild 77 Joerg Rieger Rosemarie Henkel Rieger Jessica Gordon Nembhard 78 Corey Rosen et al 79 William Foote Whyte 80 Gar Alperovitz 81 Seymour Melman 82 Mario Bunge Richard D Wolff and David Schweickart 83 In Europe important contributions came from England and Italy especially from Will Bartlett 84 Virginie Perotin 85 Bruno Jossa 86 Stefano Zamagni 87 Carlo Borzaga 88 Jacques Defourny 89 and Tom Winters 90 Co operative federalism versus co operative individualism editA major historical debate in co operative economics has been between co operative federalism and co operative individualism In an Owenite village of cooperation or a commune the residents would be both the producers and consumers of its products However for co operative enterprise other than communes the producers and consumers of its products are two different groups of people and usually only one of these groups is given the status of members or co owners The differences in goals purpose and power between worker and consumer cooperatives has led to a debate between those who support consumer co operatives known as co operative federalists and those who favor worker co operatives pejoratively labelled individualist co operativists by the federalists 91 92 Co operative federalism edit Co operative federalism is the school of thought favouring consumer co operative societies Historically its proponents have included JTW Mitchell and Charles Gide as well as Paul Lambert and Beatrice Webb Co operative federalists argue that consumers should form co operative wholesale societies co operative federations in which all members are co operators the best historical example of which being CWS in the United Kingdom and that these co operative wholesale societies should undertake purchasing farms or factories They argue that profits or surpluses from these co operative wholesale societies should be paid as dividends to the member co operators rather than to their workers 93 Co operative individualism edit Co operative individualism is the school of thought favouring workers co operatives The most notable proponents of workers co operatives are in Britain the Christian socialists and later writers like Joseph Reeves who put this forth as a path to state socialism 94 Where co operative federalists argue for federations in which consumer co operators federate and receive the monetary dividends rather in co operative wholesale societies the profits or surpluses would be paid as dividends to their workers 93 The Mondragon Co operatives in Spain are commonly cited by co operative individualists and a lot of co operative individualist literature deals with these societies The Mondragon Cooperative Corporation has drawn so much attention because in 2010 it was the seventh largest company in Spain It consists of about 250 different worker cooperative businesses The business model they use includes extensive integration and solidarity with employees worker involvement in policy and committees a transparent wage system and full practice of democratic control 95 These two schools of thought are not necessarily in opposition and hybrids of the two positions are possible 93 James Warbasse s work 96 and more recently Johnston Birchall s 97 provide perspectives on the breadth of co operative development nationally and internationally Benjamin Ward provided a formal treatment to begin an evaluation of market syndicalism Jaroslav Vanek wrote a comprehensive work in an attempt to address cooperativism in economic terms and a labor managed economy 98 David Ellerman began by considering legal philosophic aspects of co operatives developing the labor theory of property 99 In 2007 he used the classical economic premise in formulating his argument deconstructing the myth of capital rights to ownership 100 Anna Milford has constructed a detailed theoretical examination of co operatives in controlled buyer markets monopsony and the implications for fair trade strategies 101 Other schools editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Socialism and anarchism edit Socialists and anarchists such as anarcho communists and anarcho syndicalists view society as one big cooperative and feel that goods produced by all should be distributed equitably to all members of the society not necessarily through a market All the members of a society are considered to be both producers and consumers State socialists tend to favor government administration of the economy while anarchists and libertarian socialists favor non governmental coordination either locally or through labor unions and worker cooperatives Although there is some debate as Bakunin and the collectivists favored market distribution using currency collectivizing production not consumption Left libertarians collectivize neither but define their leftness as inalienable rights to the commons not collective ownership of it thus rejecting Lockean homesteading Utopian socialists feel socialism can be achieved without class struggle and that cooperatives should only include those who voluntarily choose to participate in them Some participants in the kibbutz movement and other intentional communities fall into this category Co operative commonwealth edit In some co operative economics literature the aim is the achievement of a co operative commonwealth a society based on cooperative and socialist principles Co operative economists federalist individualist and otherwise have presented the extension of their economic model to its natural limits as a goal This ideal was widely supported in early twentieth century U S and Canadian leftist circles This ideal and the language behind it were central to the formation of the Co operative Commonwealth Federation party in 1932 which became Canada s largest left wing political party and continues to this day as the New Democratic Party They were also important to the economic principles of the Farmer Labor Party of the United States particularly in the FLP s Minnesota affiliate where advocacy for a co operative commonwealth formed the central theme of the party s platform from 1934 until the Minnesota FLP merged with the state Democratic Party to form the Democratic Farmer Labor Party in 1944 Co operative commonwealth ideas were also developed in Great Britain and Ireland from the 1880s by William Morris which also inspired the guild socialist movement for associative democracy from 1906 right through the 1920s Guild socialist thinkers included Bertrand Russell R H Tawney and G D H Cole Employee ownership edit Some economists have argued that economic democracy could be achieved by combining employee ownership on a national scale including worker cooperatives within a free market apparatus Tom Winters argues that as with the free market more generally it is not free trade itself that creates inequality it s how free trade is used who benefits from it and who does not 102 Cooperative microeconomics editAccording to Herve Moulin cooperation from a game theoretic point of view in the economic tradition is the mutual assistance between egoists He distinguishes three modes of such cooperation decentralised behaviour where the collective outcome results from the strategic decisions of selfish agents arbitration by a mechanical formula or benevolent dictator about actions on the basis of normative principles direct agreement between agents after face to face bargaining These modes are present in every cooperative institution but their virtues are often logically incompatible 103 See also editEconomic democracy History of the cooperative movement Market socialism Rochdale Principles SyndicalismReferences edit Cooperative Economics Archived from the original on 2018 02 19 Retrieved 2017 06 17 a b c Restakis John 2010 Humanizing the Economy British Columbia New Society Publishers p 31 Lockard Craig 2020 Societies Networks and Transitions Boston Cengage pp 1 104 Lockard Craig 2021 Societies Networks and Transitions 4 ed Boston Cengage p 496 Curl John 2012 For All the People Uncovering the Hidden History of Cooperation Cooperative Movements and Communalism in America Oakland PM Press a b Schneider Nathan 2018 Everything for Everyone New York City Bold Type Books Mathews Race 2009 Jobs of Our Own Building a Stakeholder Society Alternatives to the Market and the State Distributist Press a b Gordon Nembhard Jessica 2014 Collective Courage A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice Pennsylvania University State Press The International Cooperative Alliance ICA 4 November 2023 Kalmi P 2006 11 08 The disappearance of cooperatives from economics textbooks PDF Cambridge Journal of Economics 31 4 625 647 doi 10 1093 cje bem005 ISSN 0309 166X The Democracy Collaborative The Democracy Collaborative November 10 2022 2012 International Year of Cooperatives United Nations Archived from the original on 2017 07 20 Retrieved 2022 04 30 Why the cooperative model is a revolution Melanie Shellito TEDxIWU YouTube Let s create our own cooperative economy Benoit Molineaux TEDxLausanne YouTube How cooperative businesses can answer tough business challenges Julia Hutchins at TEDxMileHigh YouTube Archived from the original on 2022 10 07 Retrieved 2022 04 30 How to stop poverty Start a worker owned cooperative Jim Brown TEDxTuscaloosa YouTube Archived from the original on 2022 10 07 Retrieved 2022 04 30 The Housing Revolution How Housing Co ops Can Provide a Better Future Regan Muir TEDxRexburg YouTube Growing community through a food co op Michelle Lopez Dohrn at TEDxOjai YouTube Archived from the original on 2022 04 30 Retrieved 2022 04 30 Anu Puusa The case for co ops the invisible giant of the economy TED YouTube Archived from the original on 2022 04 30 Retrieved 2022 04 30 Children s Cooperatives A way forward Rita Panicker TEDxMuscatLive YouTube Archived from the original on 2022 04 30 Retrieved 2022 04 30 Wolff Richard 2013 Democracy at Work New York Democracy at Work Institute ICA What is a Cooperative International Cooperative Alliance Archived from the original on 2022 10 07 Retrieved 2022 04 30 Chapter 157A employee cooperative corporations General Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Retrieved 2023 08 28 Koopman Ken 2021 2012 People Before Profit The Inspiring Story of the Founder of Bob s Red Mill Rose Ranch Publishing Staubus Martin April 17 2017 The ESOPerative Archived from the original on April 30 2022 Retrieved April 30 2022 Co operative Companies Act 1996 No 24 as at 28 October 2021 Public Act Contents New Zealand Legislation Retrieved 2023 08 28 European Commission European Cooperative Society ECS Archived from the original on 2022 05 03 Retrieved 2022 05 03 The following statistics come from International Labor Organization Statistics on Cooperatives Available at https www ilo org Archived 2008 07 25 at the Wayback Machine NCEO 2020 Available at https www nceo org Archived 2022 05 02 at the Wayback Machine International Cooperative Alliance Facts and Statistics https www ica coop en cooperatives facts and figures Archived 2020 08 03 at the Wayback Machine NCBA https ncbaclusa coop resources Archived 2022 10 07 at the Wayback Machine NRECA https www electric coop electric cooperative fact sheet Archived 2022 05 06 at the Wayback Machine World Cooperative Monitor ICA Monitor Archived from the original on 2022 05 05 Retrieved 2022 05 05 see the 2021 report here Archived 2022 01 22 at the Wayback Machine Cooperative identity values amp principles Archived from the original on 2022 05 07 Retrieved 2022 05 02 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2022 01 18 Retrieved 2022 05 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Sachs Jeffrey 2015 The Age of Sustainable Development New York Columbia University Press pp 63 216 243 351 2 434 440 482 Sachs Jeffrey 2021 Ages of Globalization New York Columbia University Press pp 214 Cf 205 Nadeau E The Cooperative Solution Madison Wisconsin 2012 pp 83 90 International Cooperative Alliance ICA 4 November 2023 U S Federation of Worker Cooperatives Work it Own It www usworker coop Canadian Worker Co op Federation Canadian Worker Co op Federation Co operatives UK www uk coop The Co op Federation Supporting and Promoting Co ops fed coop NCBA CLUSA National Cooperative Business Association NCBA CLUSA Home National Association of Housing Cooperatives Democracy at Work d w Democracy at Work d w Cooperation Jackson Cooperation Jackson GEO Home Grassroots Economic Organizing geo coop Home Page Jobs With Justice Fighting for workers rights and Jobs With Justice Platform Cooperativism Consortium A hub that helps you start grow or convert to platform co ops Platform Cooperativism Consortium August 4 2023 Home Purpose Institute for Christian Socialism Institute for Christian Socialism Southeast Center for Cooperative Development Southeast Center for Cooperative Development The Working World Non extractive Finance for Worker CooperativesThe Working World Home New Economy Coalition November 9 2020 Zebras Unite Co Op Zebras Unite Co Op Community Wealth Community Purchasing Alliance Community Purchasing Alliance March 23 2023 Your Lender and Partner Capital Impact Partners Home Cdfcoop Homepage SEED COMMONS Shared Capital Cooperative Building Economic Democracy Shared Capital Cooperative Transform Finance www transformfinance org Owen Robert A New View of Society originally published in 1813 1814 in Gartrell V A ed Report to the County of Lanark A New View of Society Ringwood Penguin Books 1970 Gide Charles as translated from French by the Co operative Reference Library Dublin Consumers Co Operative Societies Manchester The Co Operative Union Limited 1921 Potter Beatrice The Co operative Movement in Great Britain London Swan Sonnenschein amp Co 1891 Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution 1902 1998 paperback ed London Freedom Press 1987 ISBN 978 0 900384 36 3 Lambert Paul as translated by Letarges Joseph and Flanagan D Studies in the Social Philosophy of Co operation originally published March 1959 Manchester Co operative Union Ltd 1963 Mathews Race Building the society of equals worker co operatives and the A L P Melbourne Victorian Fabian Society 1983 Charles Graeme and Griffiths David The Co operative Formation Decision Discussing the Co operative Option Frankston Co operative Federation of Victoria Ltd 2003 and 2004 Cole G D H The British Co operative Movement in a Socialist Society A Report for the Fabian Society London George Allen amp Unwin Ltd 1951 and Cole G D H A Century of Co operation Oxford George Allen amp Unwin for The Co operative Union Ltd 1944 Stanford Leland 1887 Co operation of Labor New York Tribune May 4 1887 Special Collection 33a Box 7 Folder 74 Stanford University Archives PDF Archived 2022 10 07 at the Wayback Machine Altenberg Lee Beyond Capitalism Leland Stanford s Forgotten Vision Sandstone and Tile Vol 14 1 8 20 Winter 1990 Stanford Historical Society Stanford California http dynamics org Altenberg PAPERS BCLSFV Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 20 2016 McCay Bonnie J 2014 Elinor Ostrom A Biographical Memoir PDF National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoirs pp 1 9 Archived PDF from the original on March 26 2015 Retrieved May 2 2022 Ward B The Firm in Illyria Market Syndicalism The American Economic Review 48 4 1958 566 589 Vanek J The Participatory Economy An Evolutionary Hypothesis and a Strategy for Development Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 1971 Ellerman D 1992 Property and Contract in Economics The Case for Economic Democracy Milford A 2004 Coffee Cooperatives and Competition Chr Michelsen Institute at FLO Archived 2020 10 03 at the Wayback Machine McCain Roger 1977 On the optimal financial environment for worker cooperatives Zeitschrift fur Nationalokonomie 37 3 4 355 384 doi 10 1007 BF01291379 S2CID 154195618 Rothschild J Worker Cooperatives and Social Enterprise American Behavioral Scientist 52 7 Mar 2009 1023 1041 Nembhard J G and C Haynes Jr Cooperative Economics A Community Revitalization Strategy Review of Black Political Economics Summer 1999 47 71 Rosen C et al 2005 Equity Whyte WF and KK Whyte 1988 Making Mondragon Alperovitz G America Beyond Capitalism Melman S 2001 After Capitalism Schweickart D 2011 After Capitalism Bartlett Will 1987 Capital accumulation and employment in a self financed worker cooperative International Journal of Industrial Organization 5 3 257 349 doi 10 1016 S0167 7187 87 80010 3 Perotin Virginie 2014 Worker Cooperatives Good Sustainable Jobs in the Community PDF Journal of Entrepreneurial and Organizational Diversity 2 2 34 47 Archived PDF from the original on 2017 11 12 Retrieved 2017 11 11 Jossa Bruno 2012 Cooperative Firms as a New Mode of Production Review of Political Economy 24 3 399 416 doi 10 1080 09538259 2012 701915 S2CID 55140236 Zamagni Stefano 2010 Cooperative Enterprise Facing the Challenge of Globalization Cheltenham Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 9781848449749 Carlo Borzaga and Jacques Defourny 2003 The Emergence of Social Enterprise London Routledge ISBN 9780415339216 Defourny Jacques 1983 L autofinancement des cooperatives de travailleurs et la theorie economique Annals of Public and Cooperative Economics 54 2 201 224 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8292 1983 tb01869 x hdl 2268 90539 Archived from the original on 2020 06 10 Retrieved 2019 12 12 Winters Tom 2018 The Cooperative State The Case for Employee Ownership on a National Scale ISBN 978 1726628839 Lewis p 244 This analysis is based on a discussion by Gide Charles as translated from French by the Co operative Reference Library Dublin Consumers CoOperative Societies Manchester The Cooperative Union Limited 1921 pp 192 203 a b c This analysis is based on a discussion by Gide Charles pp 192 203 Reeves Joseph A Century of Rochdale Cooperation 1844 1944 London Lawrence amp Wishart 1944 Dunn John 2014 Cooperatives In Rowe Debra ed Achieving Sustainability Visions Principles and Practices Macmillan Reference USA Vol 1 Archived from the original on 2019 03 06 Retrieved 2019 03 03 via GALE Warbasse J 1936 Cooperative Democracy Birchall J 1997 The International Co operative Movement Vanek J 1970 General Theory of Labor Managed Economies Ellerman D 1989 The Democratic Worker Owned Firm Ellerman D 2007 On the Role of Capital in Capitalist and Labor Managed Firms Review of Radical Political Economics Milford A 2004 Coffee Cooperatives Competition The Impact of Fair Trade Chr Michelsen Institute Winters Tom 2018 The Cooperative State The Case for Employee Ownership on a National Scale p 200 ISBN 978 1726628839 Moulin Herve 1995 Cooperative Microeconomics a Game Theoretic Introduction Princeton N J and Chichester West Sussex Princeton University Press pp 4 5 11 ISBN 0 691 03481 8 Further reading editConsumers Co operative Societies by Charles Gide 1922 Co operation 1921 1947 published monthly by The Co operative League of America The History of Co operation by George Jacob Holyoake 1908 Cooperative Peace Archived 2014 10 20 at the Wayback Machine by James Peter Warbasse 1950 Problems Of Cooperation by James Peter Warbasse 1941 Why Co ops What Are They How Do They Work A pamphlet from the G I Roundtable series by Joseph G Knapp 1944 Law of Cooperatives by Legal Firm Stoel Rives Seattle For All The People Uncovering the Hidden History of Cooperation Cooperative Movements and Communalism in America PM Press by John Curl 2009 Humanizing The Economy Cooperatives in an Age of Capital New Society Publishers 2010 The Cooperative Solution by E G Nadeau 2012 A popular and contemporary introduction to cooperative economics The Commons and Co operative Commonwealth Pat Conaty 2013 The Cooperative State The Case for Employee Ownership on a National Scale by Tom Winters 2018 Commons Sense Co operative place making and the capturing of land value for 21st century Garden Cities edited by Pat Conaty and Martin Large 2013 Everything for Everyone The Radical Tradition That is Shaping the Next Economy Nathan Schneider Bold Type Books 2018 The Economics of Financial Cooperatives Income Distribution Political Economy and Regulation by Amr Khafagy 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Co operative economics amp oldid 1189894491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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