Agricultural cooperatives are key to reducing hunger and poverty
Cooperatives
offer prospects that smallholder farmers would not be able to achieve
individually.
http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/93820/icode/
31 October
2011, Rome -
Smallholder farmers gain big benefits from agricultural
cooperatives including bargaining power and resource sharing that lead to food
security and poverty reduction for millions, the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD)
and the World Food Programme (WFP) stressed today on the occasion of the launch of the International Year of
Cooperatives 2012 (IYC) in New York.
The
importance of agricultural cooperatives in improving the lives of millions of
smallholder farmers and their families cannot be overstated, the three
Rome-based United Nations (UN) agencies said. Empowered by being a part of a
larger group, smallholder farmers can negotiate better terms in contract
farming and lower prices for agricultural inputs like seeds, fertilizer and
equipment. In addition, cooperatives offer prospects that smallholder farmers
would not be able to achieve individually such as helping them to secure land
rights and better market opportunities.
Ranging
from small-scale to multi-million dollar businesses across the globe,
cooperatives operate in all sectors of the economy, count over 800 million
members and provide 100 million jobs worldwide -- 20 per cent more than
multinational enterprises. In 2008, the largest 300 cooperatives in the world
had an aggregate turnover of US$1.1 trillion, comparable to the gross domestic
product (GDP) of many large countries.
Cooperatives: a pillar of agricultural development
and food security
Agriculture,
including farming, forestry, fisheries and livestock, is the main source of
employment and income in rural areas, where the majority of the world's poor
and hungry people live. Agricultural cooperatives play an important role in
supporting men and women small agricultural producers and marginalized groups
by creating sustainable rural employment.
Producer
cooperatives offer men and women smallholders market opportunities, and provide
them with services such as better training in natural resource management, and
better access to information, technologies, innovations and extension
services. In several countries, FAO
provides quality seeds and fertilizers to farmers and agricultural cooperatives
and works with them in applying more suitable and productive farming practices.
IFAD works
with local agricultural cooperatives in
Through
support such as this, smallholders can achieve sustainable livelihoods, improve
food security in their communities and play a greater role in meeting the
growing demand for food on local, national and international markets.
In
Supporting agricultural cooperatives: The IYC
and beyond
The
Rome-based UN agencies will promote the growth of agricultural cooperatives by:
• Carrying out
initiatives to better understand cooperatives and assess their socio-economic
development impact, and to raise awareness of their role and impact on the
lives of men and women smallholder farmers -- such as FAO's database of good practices in institutional
innovations;
•
Supporting cooperatives to form networks through which smallholder producers
can pool their assets and competencies to overcome market barriers and other
constraints such as a lack of access to natural resources;
• Assisting
policy-makers in the design and implementation of policies, laws, regulations
and projects that take into consideration the needs and concerns of both men
and women smallholder farmers and create enabling environment for agricultural
cooperatives to thrive; and
•
Strengthening the dialogue and cooperation between governments, agricultural
cooperatives, the international research community and civil society
representatives on analyzing the best conditions for cooperatives worldwide to
develop.
During the
year ahead and beyond, the Rome-based UN agencies will remain committed to
supporting agricultural cooperatives, which provide members with economic
advantages and offer
them a wide range of services that build up their skills and improve their
livelihoods. Cooperatives offer a sound and viable business model suited to the
needs of rural communities in developing countries.