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1 
Proutist Economic Development 
Cooperatives 
By Dharmadeva
2 
Cooperative industries 
• All people have the right to be 
guaranteed minimum requirements 
such as food (including water), 
clothing, housing, education and 
medical care. 
• These basic requirements should be 
cooperatively produced because 
they are essential collective 
requirements.
3 
Cooperatives as a form of 
economic enterprise 
• Co-ops help people work together and 
move forward in a collective way. 
• They are capable of seeking a 
balanced adjustment between 
collective spirit and individual rights. 
• Getting things done with collective 
effort.
4 
Benefits 
• Combines the wealth and resources 
of many individuals and harnesses 
them in a united way. 
• Structured so that individual interest 
does not dominate collective 
interests. 
• Individual dominance can adversely 
effect the welfare of different social 
groups.
5 
Essence of cooperatives 
• Involves getting things done between free 
human beings with: 
(i) equal rights; 
(ii) equal human prestige (and mutual 
respect for each other); 
(iii) equal locus standi (eg, legal standing); 
so that everyone's welfare is considered. 
This is called "coordinated cooperation".
6 
Coordinated Cooperation 
• Needed for equilibrium and equipoise in 
social life. 
• A socio-economic system should be based 
on coordinated cooperation not 
subordinated cooperation. 
• "Subordinated cooperation" involves people 
doing something individually or collectively, 
but keeping themselves under other 
peoples' supervision or control. 
• This can degenerate the moral fabric of 
an enterprise and should be avoided when 
structuring cooperative business 
enterprises.
7 
Workforce composition 
• All groups in the cooperative workforce will 
benefit from the cooperative's profits. 
• They will be entitled to draw dividends and 
salaries including bonuses on the basis of their 
membership in, and services they render to, 
the cooperative. 
• Labourers or workers also include those who 
are engaged in cooperative management. 
• The members of a cooperative can be 
composed of: 
(i) shareholders - who receive salaries for their 
work plus a return on their shares; 
(ii) non-shareholders or labourers - who enjoy 
stable employment and favourable wages or 
incomes.
8 
Cooperatives ownership 
• Without a sense of personal ownership 
people do not work hard or care for 
property. 
• Suppression of personal ownership 
sentiments results in sluggish production 
and psychic oppression. 
• In cooperatives, there is personal 
ownership, subject to: 
– social limitations on concentration of 
wealth; and 
– a mechanism to ensure progressive 
increase in everyone's living standards.
9 
Membership 
requirements 
• Worker's or shareholder's longer term 
commitment to the cooperative. 
• Cooperative members have to be local 
people who, by virtue of their established 
residence, can make a commitment to the 
cooperative and the region it services. 
• Local is a relative concept and expands 
over time. 
• Anyone who wishes to be part of the socio-economic 
life of a region can settle there 
and become a member of a local 
cooperatives.
10 
Shareholder composition 
• Members who purchase shares in a 
cooperative should have no power or right 
to transfer their shares without the 
permission of the cooperative. 
• Such a pre-emptive right allows existing 
shareholders to determine the basis of 
membership, and prevents capitalist 
entrepreneurs from purchasing large 
numbers of shares in a cooperative and 
speculating in the market.
11 
Share transfer 
• Shares can however be inherited. 
• Generally, the shares of cooperative members 
without descendants simply pass on to their 
legally authorised successors, who become 
members of the cooperative if they are not 
already members. 
• Different countries have different systems of 
inheritance, so the right of inheritance should be 
decided according to the system in vogue. 
• In Western common law countries if someone 
inherits shares in a business enterprise and does 
not want to become a member of that enterprise, 
existing shareholders simply buy that person out. 
• The same reasoning can be applied to 
cooperatives - following this arrangement will help 
cooperative members avoid litigation.
12 
New shareholders 
• Because cooperative members 
will be from the same vicinity 
they will all know each other, so 
there should be no difficulty in 
deciding who should be able to 
buy shares due to ignorance 
about potential shareholders.
13 
Dividend distribution 
• In a cooperative system there is no need for 
preference shares. 
• Today preference shares are used by some 
financial institutions as a substitute 
for debt investments (ie loans to businesses). 
• Preference shares really mean that a lender in 
the guise of a shareholder has first grab at co-op 
dividends and therefore co-op profits. 
• Such investors should become ordinary 
shareholders like other co-op members and 
share proportionately in the success (or 
perhaps otherwise) of the co-op.
14 
Non-shareholder workers 
• Non-shareholding workers are possible and 
can be categorized into those who are: 
(i) permanent labourers - who get bonuses 
and premiums (‘dividends’) as incentives 
besides their wages; and 
(ii) casual or contract labourers - who only 
get wages for their labour.
15 
Bonus distributions 
• Workers (or worker/shareholders) 
who give the greatest service to the 
cooperative should get the greatest 
bonuses. 
• Bonuses should be paid in proportion 
to wage rates and should reflect 
both the skill and productivity of the 
worker.
16 
Incentive system 
• Cooperatives are to develop a proper incentive 
system so that individual initiative by talented 
people is encouraged. 
• An incentive system should ensure that 
intelligent people are not forced to do work 
which is unsuitable for them, or be paid the 
same wages as ordinary workers. 
• If skilled workers get paid more than unskilled 
workers there will be an incentive for all to 
become skilled and work harder. 
• In this way the cooperative will encourage the 
educational and skill upgrading of its 
members.
17 
Who else benefits? 
• Disadvantaged persons can also benefit from the 
cooperative system. 
• A widow, orphaned minor or disabled worker can 
own shares and derive an income based on the 
number of shares they own. 
• Therefore even if as cooperative members they are 
unable to work or are retired, they will can still be 
entitled to an income from special funds 
deriving cooperative profits, eg pension funds. 
• Establishing such a structure on a large 
scale should be able to do away with the welfare 
state mentality prevalent in capitalist societies.
18 
Cooperative behaviour 
• Encourage individual initiative by 
talented people. 
• Organisational behaviour and outlook 
to be cultivated is one that is non-materialistic. 
• Leadership is subtle and sophisticated.
19 
Cooperative 
management 
• Cooperative members should 
elect a board of directors from 
amongst the cooperative 
members. 
• The position of director should 
not be honorary or hereditary. 
• Directors must be moralists.
20 
Board of Directors 
• The board decides the amount of profit to be 
divided amongst members, ie the dividends or 
bonuses to be paid to each shareholder and/or 
worker. 
• However, not all profit should be distributed in the 
form of dividends. Some should be kept or used for: 
(i) reinvestment, purchasing capital items or repair 
and maintenance; 
(ii) increasing the authorised capital of existing 
shareholders; 
(iii) deposit into a reserve fund to be used to 
increase the value or rate of dividends in years 
when production is low. 
• This also ensures that shareholder capital is not 
adversely affected.
21 
Farmer cooperatives 
• The importance of food means there has to be 
maximum and safe utilisation of agricultural land. 
• The best way to achieve proper organisation of 
agriculture is on a cooperative basis. 
• Land is very important in the psychology of farmers 
so a proper cooperative system has to be built up 
to give farmers a sense of ownership of their land 
and permanent usufructuary rights to the land 
while it is managed cooperatively. 
• This will also give a better outturn. 
• The cooperative system has to be psychological 
and subtle so that farmers do not feel adversely 
affected or insecure.
22 
Pooling of land 
• Farming cooperatives can be achieved by 
farmers pooling their land in cooperatives 
and keeping records of their shares based 
on the size of their individual land holdings. 
• In this way many small plots can be 
merged and boundaries for adjoining lands 
broken down, removing needless division 
of land into small individual holdings. 
• This allows for an increase in the area 
of land available for cultivation, benefiting 
farmers collectively.
23 
Research and development 
• In the cooperative system there is also 
great scope for agricultural research and 
development into new ways to better 
utilize and prolong the vitality of land. 
• The ill effects of chemical fertilizers, 
which are common in individual farming 
and relatively unavoidable because of lack 
of individual capital, could be minimized or 
eliminated.
24 
Producer cooperatives 
• Cooperatives which are agricultural should sell 
their produce to producer cooperatives, which in 
turn can manufacture a wide variety of consumer 
goods. 
• Raw materials which are of non-farming origin, 
such as limestone for the production of cement, 
can also be processed by producer cooperatives. 
• Producer cooperatives need to be formed for agro 
industries, agrico industries and non-agricultural 
industries. 
• The total profit of such cooperatives should be 
distributed amongst the workers and members of 
the cooperative according to their individual capital 
investment (shares) in the cooperative and the 
service (labour) they render to the production and 
management of the cooperative.
25 
Farmer-producer 
cooperatives 
• Farmers in agricultural cooperatives may also 
create producer cooperatives to produce items for 
various industries. 
• Some cooperatives may function as both farmer 
and producer cooperatives. 
• Farmer cooperatives which also function as 
producer cooperatives have the opportunity of 
increasing their profitability in various ways. 
• For example, producer cooperatives functioning 
with agricultural cooperatives could produce rice 
as well as oil from the husks.
26 
Consumer cooperatives 
• Consumer cooperatives will distribute consumer 
goods to members of the public at reasonable 
rates. 
• These cooperatives should be formed by persons 
having an interest in selling goods to the public (ie 
not hoarding), and will share profits according to 
the standard criteria of individual labour and capital 
investment (shares). 
• Consumer cooperatives will be supplied by both 
agricultural and producer cooperatives. 
• For example, agricultural or producer cooperatives 
which produce cotton or silk thread will sell the 
thread to weaver cooperatives, which can produce 
cloth using the appropriate or latest technology. 
• Weaver cooperatives will in turn supply consumer 
cooperatives that sell the cloth to the public.
27 
Service cooperatives 
• These are special cooperatives 
which should be formed by people 
involved in service-type industries, 
such as doctors. 
• Professional cooperatives for 
dentists, accountants, etc can also 
be formed. 
• Small business may remain privately 
owned.
28 
Satellite 
cooperatives 
• An economy can advocate the formation of many 
small satellite cooperatives to supply various items 
to large producer cooperatives. 
• Eg, different parts of a motor car can be locally 
manufactured in small cooperatives (and even 
carried out as cottage industries). 
• The main function of the producer cooperative will 
then be assembly. 
• This has two benefits: 
(i) large cooperatives will not require many 
labourers, minimizing labour unrest; and 
(ii) labour costs can be reduced, keeping the cost 
of commodities low.
29 
COOPERATIVE GAMES 
- are a technique of experiential education that 
raises consciousness and teaches solidarity.
30 
Cooperative games 
- promote kindness, honesty, trust and 
teamwork.

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Slide presentation on cooperative society

  • 1. 1 Proutist Economic Development Cooperatives By Dharmadeva
  • 2. 2 Cooperative industries • All people have the right to be guaranteed minimum requirements such as food (including water), clothing, housing, education and medical care. • These basic requirements should be cooperatively produced because they are essential collective requirements.
  • 3. 3 Cooperatives as a form of economic enterprise • Co-ops help people work together and move forward in a collective way. • They are capable of seeking a balanced adjustment between collective spirit and individual rights. • Getting things done with collective effort.
  • 4. 4 Benefits • Combines the wealth and resources of many individuals and harnesses them in a united way. • Structured so that individual interest does not dominate collective interests. • Individual dominance can adversely effect the welfare of different social groups.
  • 5. 5 Essence of cooperatives • Involves getting things done between free human beings with: (i) equal rights; (ii) equal human prestige (and mutual respect for each other); (iii) equal locus standi (eg, legal standing); so that everyone's welfare is considered. This is called "coordinated cooperation".
  • 6. 6 Coordinated Cooperation • Needed for equilibrium and equipoise in social life. • A socio-economic system should be based on coordinated cooperation not subordinated cooperation. • "Subordinated cooperation" involves people doing something individually or collectively, but keeping themselves under other peoples' supervision or control. • This can degenerate the moral fabric of an enterprise and should be avoided when structuring cooperative business enterprises.
  • 7. 7 Workforce composition • All groups in the cooperative workforce will benefit from the cooperative's profits. • They will be entitled to draw dividends and salaries including bonuses on the basis of their membership in, and services they render to, the cooperative. • Labourers or workers also include those who are engaged in cooperative management. • The members of a cooperative can be composed of: (i) shareholders - who receive salaries for their work plus a return on their shares; (ii) non-shareholders or labourers - who enjoy stable employment and favourable wages or incomes.
  • 8. 8 Cooperatives ownership • Without a sense of personal ownership people do not work hard or care for property. • Suppression of personal ownership sentiments results in sluggish production and psychic oppression. • In cooperatives, there is personal ownership, subject to: – social limitations on concentration of wealth; and – a mechanism to ensure progressive increase in everyone's living standards.
  • 9. 9 Membership requirements • Worker's or shareholder's longer term commitment to the cooperative. • Cooperative members have to be local people who, by virtue of their established residence, can make a commitment to the cooperative and the region it services. • Local is a relative concept and expands over time. • Anyone who wishes to be part of the socio-economic life of a region can settle there and become a member of a local cooperatives.
  • 10. 10 Shareholder composition • Members who purchase shares in a cooperative should have no power or right to transfer their shares without the permission of the cooperative. • Such a pre-emptive right allows existing shareholders to determine the basis of membership, and prevents capitalist entrepreneurs from purchasing large numbers of shares in a cooperative and speculating in the market.
  • 11. 11 Share transfer • Shares can however be inherited. • Generally, the shares of cooperative members without descendants simply pass on to their legally authorised successors, who become members of the cooperative if they are not already members. • Different countries have different systems of inheritance, so the right of inheritance should be decided according to the system in vogue. • In Western common law countries if someone inherits shares in a business enterprise and does not want to become a member of that enterprise, existing shareholders simply buy that person out. • The same reasoning can be applied to cooperatives - following this arrangement will help cooperative members avoid litigation.
  • 12. 12 New shareholders • Because cooperative members will be from the same vicinity they will all know each other, so there should be no difficulty in deciding who should be able to buy shares due to ignorance about potential shareholders.
  • 13. 13 Dividend distribution • In a cooperative system there is no need for preference shares. • Today preference shares are used by some financial institutions as a substitute for debt investments (ie loans to businesses). • Preference shares really mean that a lender in the guise of a shareholder has first grab at co-op dividends and therefore co-op profits. • Such investors should become ordinary shareholders like other co-op members and share proportionately in the success (or perhaps otherwise) of the co-op.
  • 14. 14 Non-shareholder workers • Non-shareholding workers are possible and can be categorized into those who are: (i) permanent labourers - who get bonuses and premiums (‘dividends’) as incentives besides their wages; and (ii) casual or contract labourers - who only get wages for their labour.
  • 15. 15 Bonus distributions • Workers (or worker/shareholders) who give the greatest service to the cooperative should get the greatest bonuses. • Bonuses should be paid in proportion to wage rates and should reflect both the skill and productivity of the worker.
  • 16. 16 Incentive system • Cooperatives are to develop a proper incentive system so that individual initiative by talented people is encouraged. • An incentive system should ensure that intelligent people are not forced to do work which is unsuitable for them, or be paid the same wages as ordinary workers. • If skilled workers get paid more than unskilled workers there will be an incentive for all to become skilled and work harder. • In this way the cooperative will encourage the educational and skill upgrading of its members.
  • 17. 17 Who else benefits? • Disadvantaged persons can also benefit from the cooperative system. • A widow, orphaned minor or disabled worker can own shares and derive an income based on the number of shares they own. • Therefore even if as cooperative members they are unable to work or are retired, they will can still be entitled to an income from special funds deriving cooperative profits, eg pension funds. • Establishing such a structure on a large scale should be able to do away with the welfare state mentality prevalent in capitalist societies.
  • 18. 18 Cooperative behaviour • Encourage individual initiative by talented people. • Organisational behaviour and outlook to be cultivated is one that is non-materialistic. • Leadership is subtle and sophisticated.
  • 19. 19 Cooperative management • Cooperative members should elect a board of directors from amongst the cooperative members. • The position of director should not be honorary or hereditary. • Directors must be moralists.
  • 20. 20 Board of Directors • The board decides the amount of profit to be divided amongst members, ie the dividends or bonuses to be paid to each shareholder and/or worker. • However, not all profit should be distributed in the form of dividends. Some should be kept or used for: (i) reinvestment, purchasing capital items or repair and maintenance; (ii) increasing the authorised capital of existing shareholders; (iii) deposit into a reserve fund to be used to increase the value or rate of dividends in years when production is low. • This also ensures that shareholder capital is not adversely affected.
  • 21. 21 Farmer cooperatives • The importance of food means there has to be maximum and safe utilisation of agricultural land. • The best way to achieve proper organisation of agriculture is on a cooperative basis. • Land is very important in the psychology of farmers so a proper cooperative system has to be built up to give farmers a sense of ownership of their land and permanent usufructuary rights to the land while it is managed cooperatively. • This will also give a better outturn. • The cooperative system has to be psychological and subtle so that farmers do not feel adversely affected or insecure.
  • 22. 22 Pooling of land • Farming cooperatives can be achieved by farmers pooling their land in cooperatives and keeping records of their shares based on the size of their individual land holdings. • In this way many small plots can be merged and boundaries for adjoining lands broken down, removing needless division of land into small individual holdings. • This allows for an increase in the area of land available for cultivation, benefiting farmers collectively.
  • 23. 23 Research and development • In the cooperative system there is also great scope for agricultural research and development into new ways to better utilize and prolong the vitality of land. • The ill effects of chemical fertilizers, which are common in individual farming and relatively unavoidable because of lack of individual capital, could be minimized or eliminated.
  • 24. 24 Producer cooperatives • Cooperatives which are agricultural should sell their produce to producer cooperatives, which in turn can manufacture a wide variety of consumer goods. • Raw materials which are of non-farming origin, such as limestone for the production of cement, can also be processed by producer cooperatives. • Producer cooperatives need to be formed for agro industries, agrico industries and non-agricultural industries. • The total profit of such cooperatives should be distributed amongst the workers and members of the cooperative according to their individual capital investment (shares) in the cooperative and the service (labour) they render to the production and management of the cooperative.
  • 25. 25 Farmer-producer cooperatives • Farmers in agricultural cooperatives may also create producer cooperatives to produce items for various industries. • Some cooperatives may function as both farmer and producer cooperatives. • Farmer cooperatives which also function as producer cooperatives have the opportunity of increasing their profitability in various ways. • For example, producer cooperatives functioning with agricultural cooperatives could produce rice as well as oil from the husks.
  • 26. 26 Consumer cooperatives • Consumer cooperatives will distribute consumer goods to members of the public at reasonable rates. • These cooperatives should be formed by persons having an interest in selling goods to the public (ie not hoarding), and will share profits according to the standard criteria of individual labour and capital investment (shares). • Consumer cooperatives will be supplied by both agricultural and producer cooperatives. • For example, agricultural or producer cooperatives which produce cotton or silk thread will sell the thread to weaver cooperatives, which can produce cloth using the appropriate or latest technology. • Weaver cooperatives will in turn supply consumer cooperatives that sell the cloth to the public.
  • 27. 27 Service cooperatives • These are special cooperatives which should be formed by people involved in service-type industries, such as doctors. • Professional cooperatives for dentists, accountants, etc can also be formed. • Small business may remain privately owned.
  • 28. 28 Satellite cooperatives • An economy can advocate the formation of many small satellite cooperatives to supply various items to large producer cooperatives. • Eg, different parts of a motor car can be locally manufactured in small cooperatives (and even carried out as cottage industries). • The main function of the producer cooperative will then be assembly. • This has two benefits: (i) large cooperatives will not require many labourers, minimizing labour unrest; and (ii) labour costs can be reduced, keeping the cost of commodities low.
  • 29. 29 COOPERATIVE GAMES - are a technique of experiential education that raises consciousness and teaches solidarity.
  • 30. 30 Cooperative games - promote kindness, honesty, trust and teamwork.

Editor's Notes

  1. There are other kinds of money besides the traditional note and coin with which we are all familiar. This presentation introduces some new kinds of currency that may be useful for communities under certain circumstances.
  2. The dominant message today in the educational system, the mass media and advertising is individualistic and competitive. This selfish, materialistic attitude is expressed as, “I win, you lose,” or more correctly, “I win, and it doesn’t matter to me what happens to you.” This individualistic outlook divides communities and harms human relations. Cooperative games are a technique of popular experiential education that help to change this consciousness and teach solidarity. In this photo for example, everyone is giving a back massage to the person in front of him or her.
  3. Cooperative games promote kindness, honesty, trust and teamwork. They are fun, full of surprises and require creative problem solving. These experiences help people to realize the difference between a cooperative paradigm and the traditional competitive one.