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Agricultural cooperative

An agricultural cooperative, also known as a farmers' co-op, is a producer cooperative in which farmers pool their resources in certain areas of activities.

A broad typology of agricultural cooperatives distinguishes between agricultural service cooperatives, which provide various services to their individually-farming members, and agricultural production cooperatives in which production resources (land, machinery) are pooled and members farm jointly.[1]

Agricultural production cooperatives are relatively rare in the world. They include collective farms in former socialist countries, the kibbutzim in Israel, collectively-governed community shared agriculture, Longo Maï co-operatives in Costa Rica, France, and some other countries, CPAs in Cuba, and Nicaraguan production cooperatives.[2]

The default meaning of "agricultural cooperative" in English is usually an agricultural service cooperative, the numerically dominant form in the world. There are two primary types of agricultural service cooperatives: supply cooperatives and marketing cooperatives. Supply cooperatives supply their members with inputs for agricultural production, including seeds, fertilizers, fuel, and machinery services. Marketing cooperatives are established by farmers to undertake transportation, packaging, pricing, distribution, sales and promotion of farm products (both crop and livestock). Farmers also widely rely on credit cooperatives as a source of financing for both working capital and investments.

Notable examples of agricultural cooperatives include Dairy Farmers Of America, the largest dairy company in the US,[3] Amul, the largest food product marketing organization in India[4] and Zen-Noah, a federation of agricultural cooperatives that handles 70% of the sales of chemical fertilizers in Japan.[5]

  1. ^ Cobia, David, editor, Cooperatives in Agriculture, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ (1989), p. 50.
  2. ^ Ruben, Ruerd and Lerman, Zvi (2005). "Why Nicaraguan peasants stay in agricultural production cooperatives". European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies. 78: 31–47 – via JSTORE.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "Dairy Industries International" (PDF).
  4. ^ "India's Amul: Keeping Up with the Times - Case - Faculty & Research - Harvard Business School". www.hbs.edu. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  5. ^ Béla A. Balassa; Marcus Noland. Japan in the World Economy. p. 228.

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