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Page 1 www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes C (ii) Rural and Agrarian transformation in India Cooperatives Evolution of Coops in India – Existed before Independence as well. Coop. started in Germany, 1890s. First Plan – • Only recommendary in nature. • Small and Medium farmers to be encouraged for coops. • CDP had cooperativisation in agenda. Second Plan – • More concrete. • A 10 years horizon for bringing half of the agri under it. • Myths created that China achieved tremendous success in agri because of coop. Myth broken after Mao’s death in 1976, their agri growth rate less than India’s. • Still, India under Nehru emulated Chinese example of coops and envisioned institutional changes in agriculture which didn’t ask for much financial outlay. Nehru pressurized but states wary. Third Plan – It mellowed down the ambition. 10 pilot projects per district. Targeted coops in: • Credit • Marketing • Distribution • Processing Page 2 www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes C (ii) Rural and Agrarian transformation in India Cooperatives Evolution of Coops in India – Existed before Independence as well. Coop. started in Germany, 1890s. First Plan – • Only recommendary in nature. • Small and Medium farmers to be encouraged for coops. • CDP had cooperativisation in agenda. Second Plan – • More concrete. • A 10 years horizon for bringing half of the agri under it. • Myths created that China achieved tremendous success in agri because of coop. Myth broken after Mao’s death in 1976, their agri growth rate less than India’s. • Still, India under Nehru emulated Chinese example of coops and envisioned institutional changes in agriculture which didn’t ask for much financial outlay. Nehru pressurized but states wary. Third Plan – It mellowed down the ambition. 10 pilot projects per district. Targeted coops in: • Credit • Marketing • Distribution • Processing www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes Structure and Significance of Coops – Various type of coops. 80% with agri. 60% for credit only. Broadly, 2 groups – • Credit Societies • Non-credit Societies Both further into two – • Agricultural Societies • Non-agri societies For supervision and financial assistance– State coop banks and Centre Govt. banks. Coops essential because – A B C D approach A – Accessibility B – Bureaucratic hassles to be decreased C – Class conflicts to be decreased D – Development -> illiterate, Poverty, women • Accessible by small and cottage industries. • Reduces bureaucratic and political hassles. • Softens class conflicts. • An institution for illiterate, poor and unskilled. Page 3 www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes C (ii) Rural and Agrarian transformation in India Cooperatives Evolution of Coops in India – Existed before Independence as well. Coop. started in Germany, 1890s. First Plan – • Only recommendary in nature. • Small and Medium farmers to be encouraged for coops. • CDP had cooperativisation in agenda. Second Plan – • More concrete. • A 10 years horizon for bringing half of the agri under it. • Myths created that China achieved tremendous success in agri because of coop. Myth broken after Mao’s death in 1976, their agri growth rate less than India’s. • Still, India under Nehru emulated Chinese example of coops and envisioned institutional changes in agriculture which didn’t ask for much financial outlay. Nehru pressurized but states wary. Third Plan – It mellowed down the ambition. 10 pilot projects per district. Targeted coops in: • Credit • Marketing • Distribution • Processing www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes Structure and Significance of Coops – Various type of coops. 80% with agri. 60% for credit only. Broadly, 2 groups – • Credit Societies • Non-credit Societies Both further into two – • Agricultural Societies • Non-agri societies For supervision and financial assistance– State coop banks and Centre Govt. banks. Coops essential because – A B C D approach A – Accessibility B – Bureaucratic hassles to be decreased C – Class conflicts to be decreased D – Development -> illiterate, Poverty, women • Accessible by small and cottage industries. • Reduces bureaucratic and political hassles. • Softens class conflicts. • An institution for illiterate, poor and unskilled. www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes 97th Amendment -> 19 (1) ( C ) 243 (B) -> Cooperatives Coop. word added after Trade Urbans Limitations– Daniel Thorner: • Coops formed as a result of evading LR by rich and influential families. Evading ceiling and tenancy laws. Land tilled by bogus members, mainly wage labour. Also cornered subsidies - Evading LR • State coop farms had poor quality land given to landless and lower castes. Extremely high cost of running them proved fatal for their success - Poor quality land’s high cost Dominant caste Public money to -> Private • Reinforced the unjust Indian social structure when dominant caste overtook leadership positions. • A case of public money given to private investment. • A very small percentage(less than 10%) of credit to small and marginal farmers - Very less small farmers • A large bureaucracy crept into coops as well - Bureaucracy crept in Populist Policies • Populist policies to write-off debts burdened exchequer and eroded the viability of rural credit instis. World bank Study on Operation flood : Anand Pattern– • Paid rich dividends. Need to replicate it elsewhere. • Milk growth from 0.7% pa to 4%. • 60% farmers small and marginal. • “Self-Selection” – an imp observation – by focusing a project on a predominant activity of poor, “self-selection” is likely to result in a majority of the beneficiaries being poor thus reaching target groups. • Milk coop reached poor irrespective of caste, religion or gender. A major politico- economic implication. • A byproduct of Op Flood is creation of indigenous dairy equipment mfg industry and an impressive body of indigenous experts. Indigenisation considerably cheap. Page 4 www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes C (ii) Rural and Agrarian transformation in India Cooperatives Evolution of Coops in India – Existed before Independence as well. Coop. started in Germany, 1890s. First Plan – • Only recommendary in nature. • Small and Medium farmers to be encouraged for coops. • CDP had cooperativisation in agenda. Second Plan – • More concrete. • A 10 years horizon for bringing half of the agri under it. • Myths created that China achieved tremendous success in agri because of coop. Myth broken after Mao’s death in 1976, their agri growth rate less than India’s. • Still, India under Nehru emulated Chinese example of coops and envisioned institutional changes in agriculture which didn’t ask for much financial outlay. Nehru pressurized but states wary. Third Plan – It mellowed down the ambition. 10 pilot projects per district. Targeted coops in: • Credit • Marketing • Distribution • Processing www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes Structure and Significance of Coops – Various type of coops. 80% with agri. 60% for credit only. Broadly, 2 groups – • Credit Societies • Non-credit Societies Both further into two – • Agricultural Societies • Non-agri societies For supervision and financial assistance– State coop banks and Centre Govt. banks. Coops essential because – A B C D approach A – Accessibility B – Bureaucratic hassles to be decreased C – Class conflicts to be decreased D – Development -> illiterate, Poverty, women • Accessible by small and cottage industries. • Reduces bureaucratic and political hassles. • Softens class conflicts. • An institution for illiterate, poor and unskilled. www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes 97th Amendment -> 19 (1) ( C ) 243 (B) -> Cooperatives Coop. word added after Trade Urbans Limitations– Daniel Thorner: • Coops formed as a result of evading LR by rich and influential families. Evading ceiling and tenancy laws. Land tilled by bogus members, mainly wage labour. Also cornered subsidies - Evading LR • State coop farms had poor quality land given to landless and lower castes. Extremely high cost of running them proved fatal for their success - Poor quality land’s high cost Dominant caste Public money to -> Private • Reinforced the unjust Indian social structure when dominant caste overtook leadership positions. • A case of public money given to private investment. • A very small percentage(less than 10%) of credit to small and marginal farmers - Very less small farmers • A large bureaucracy crept into coops as well - Bureaucracy crept in Populist Policies • Populist policies to write-off debts burdened exchequer and eroded the viability of rural credit instis. World bank Study on Operation flood : Anand Pattern– • Paid rich dividends. Need to replicate it elsewhere. • Milk growth from 0.7% pa to 4%. • 60% farmers small and marginal. • “Self-Selection” – an imp observation – by focusing a project on a predominant activity of poor, “self-selection” is likely to result in a majority of the beneficiaries being poor thus reaching target groups. • Milk coop reached poor irrespective of caste, religion or gender. A major politico- economic implication. • A byproduct of Op Flood is creation of indigenous dairy equipment mfg industry and an impressive body of indigenous experts. Indigenisation considerably cheap. www.YouTube.com/SleepyClasses Sleepy Classes • Women empowerment – along with SEWA Ela Bhatt and others 6000 Women Dairy Coop Socs. • Demand driven education, schooling, infra etc. • Impetus to various other brands, eg – Dhara (NDDB effort in vegetable oils). For writing in Essays or otherwise while highlighting diversity of India- Kurien– A Syrian Christian from Kerala Working in Gujarat.Read More
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