Consumers' cooperative

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A consumers' cooperative is a business owned by its customers for their mutual gain. It is a form of free enterprise that is oriented toward service rather than pecuniary profit. The customers or consumers of the goods and/or services the business provides are also the individuals who have provided the capital required to launch or purchase that enterprise.

(Although a consumers' co-op is sometimes called a retail cooperative, it should be distinguished from a retailers' cooperative, whose members are the stores or chains themselves, rather than the individual consumers.)

A consumers' cooperative may comprise supermarkets, convenience stores, and other businesses owned by independently-owned, and run Co-operative societies, which benefit from joint co-ordination and co-operation in managing their businesses. As mutually-owned businesses, each member of a society has a shareholding equal to the sum they paid in when they joined.

Consumer Co-Ops are run much like a normal business. They require workers, managers, clerks, products, and customers to keep the doors open and the business running. In many co-ops the shoppers are often workers as well. Discounts are given based on the amount of time put in. This allows the community be more involved in the business they in fact helped establish and are keeping in business. It also allows for new trade skills to be learned such as butchering or cooking. It also allows local farmers a centralized place to sell their food and can then be passed on to the consumer.

Co-Ops can differ greatly in start up and also in how the co-op is run. Some co-ops forgo the idea of mangers and hieratical formations, everyone who puts into the co-op is on the same level and receive the same benefits. Other co-ops seem to resemble worker-owned companies with mangers and a hieratical structure but decisions that affect the co-op are made democratically.


Consumers' Co-operatives may, in turn, form Co-operative Federations. These may come in the form of co-operative wholesale societies, through which Consumers' Co-operatives collectively purchase goods at wholesale prices and, in some cases, own factories. Alternatively, they may be members of Co-operative Unions.

Contents

[edit] Consumers' co-operatives in different countries

[edit] Australia

  • University Co-operative Bookshop Ltd, Co-op Bookshop, Australia's largest Consumers' co-operative. Established by students in 1958, has grown to become the largest provider of educational, professional and lifelong learning resources in Australia. With over 40 branches across Australia, numerous additional services and over one million members, the Co-op is more than just a bookshop.
  • The Wine Society (Australian Wine Consumers’ Co-operative Society Limited) The Wine Society Established in 1946,now has over 50,000 members. Also sources and sells premium wines under the Society label, runs comprehensive wine education courses and recognises excellence from young winemakers.

[edit] Europe

In the United Kingdom, the nationwide Co-operative Group, formerly the Co-operative Wholesale Society (or "CWS"), owns many of its own supermarkets, as well as supplying goods wholesale to the majority of British co-operative societies, providing a common branding and logo.

In Scandinavia, the national cooperations of Norway, Sweden and Denmark joined as Coop Norden A/S in 2002.

In Italy the Coop Italia chain formed by many sub-cooperatives controls at 2005 the bigger part of the grocery market with the 17.7% of the total.

In Finland the S-group is owned by 22 regional cooperatives and 19 local cooperative stores, which in turn are owned by their customers.

[edit] Japan

In Japan, Co-op Kobe (コープこうべ) in Hyōgo Prefecture is the largest retail cooperative in Japan and, with over 1.2 million members, is one of the largest cooperatives in the world.

[edit] North America

In the United States, the PCC (Puget Consumers Cooperative) Natural Markets in Seattle is the largest consumer-owned food cooperative in the United States.[1]. The National Cooperative Grocers' Association maintains a Food Cooperative Directory.

[edit] Role of government

There is no unusual government role in a consumer owned and operated business and practically considered there is less requirement for government involvement than there is with a business established to maximize monetary gain for its owners. This is because there is no incentive for a consumer-owned company to misrepresent the quality or value of what it offers for sale to its owner customers, so there is little utility or need in having inspectors who work for a government policing this form of business. As the consumer ultimately provides the capital for all business enterprise it is unfortunate that the consumer ownership form of endeavor is not better understood and utilized. There is no functional reason why most, if not all, corporate enterprises could not thrive if they were owned and operated as consumers' co-operatives, rather than speculative endeavors designed to provide pecuniary gain for parties who may have no personal involvement in the enterprise beyond monetary profit.

Because consumers' co-operatives are run democratically they are subject to some of the same problems of democratic government: the selection of incompetent or dishonest management, poor business planning, deficit spending, etc. Problems such as these can generally be avoided by providing member/owners with educational materials that inform often and honestly as regard to business conditions. A helpful study of practices that are detrimental to a consumer owned business is provided by Problems Of Cooperation, by James Peter Warbasse.

[edit] What Consumers’ Cooperation does

Consumers' Co-operation has been a focus of study in the field of Co-operative economics. The Co-operative Federalist school, in particular, has advocated such organisational forms.

Below is an account of: ‘What Consumers’ Cooperation does,’ excerpted from the May, 1934, issue of Cooperation.

  • Consumers' Cooperation is the Economic System necessary to match the Age of Automatic Power Production. It is a democratic economic system based on "cooperation for use" and not "competition for profit." It is the Economy of Abundance instead of Scarcity. These are some of its proven Principles and Practices—which really make "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" possible for ALL.
  • Consumers' Cooperation means Consumers' Ownership and Control. In As much as consumers furnish the market, which is the most essential thing in an economy of abundance, organized consumers must have the ownership and control of the means of production and distribution so that they can regulate production to their needs of consumption, can supply themselves with pure products without adulteration, and do so without competitive wastes in the processes of production and distribution.
  • Consumers' Cooperation is Economic Democracy. Consumers, who are everybody, become the owners. Voting is by person and not by property,- one person, one vote. Proxy voting is eliminated—members must attend meetings and be active. Membership is open to everyone. We now have management control largely in industry, not even stockholder control. Under a cooperative system consumers control and the management executes their will.
  • Consumers' Cooperatives Distribute Profits Justly. So-called profits, which in cooperatives are really overcharges or savings, are paid back to the consumer-member-owners on the basis of purchases, as patronage refunds. Those who produce the profits get them in proportion to the contribution they make towards them by their purchases. John T. W. Mitchell, the great leader of the C.W.S. says, "Those who pay the profits should get them back."
  • Consumers' Cooperation results in Security—not Speculation. Capital is hired at the lowest cost. A minimum rate of interest is paid. There are no excessive earnings for investors so there is no watering of stock to cover them up. Stock cannot be sold at more than par value. Consumers' cooperatives require no governmental stock market security regulation because there is no speculation in cooperative stocks.
  • Consumers' Cooperation Increases the Income of Every Consumer-Member. A 10% patronage refund on regular retail prices means one ninth more food, goods and services.
  • Consumers' Cooperatives Pay Fair Salaries. They are large enough to secure trained experts for managing large scale industry, but not excessive, as under the present management control of corporation policies and payrolls.
  • Consumers' Cooperatives Abolish Secrecy. Whatever cannot survive in the open in a democracy is wrong. Balance Sheets. Profit and Loss Statements and every other figure and fact are open to consumer-member-owners in a cooperative. It is the business of all.
  • Consumers' Cooperatives Strive for Cash Business, not Credit. Credit was said by one of the men who organized the first Rochdale Cooperative in England to be "The invention of the Devil." The only real reasons for credit business are competition for customers and inequality in the distribution of wealth, both of which cooperation eliminates. Under Consumers' Cooperation the money you invest buys a stock of goods which is carried on hand. The cash you then pay for each purchase enables the inventory to be replenished, ready for you the next time you need it.
  • Consumers' Cooperation Produces Pure Food and Goods, not shoddy products nor poison for profit. There is no reason for adulteration when consumers own their own business and buy for themselves. Deception is the result of the attempt to make more private profit for a few owners. Under cooperation the truth can be told in advertising and over the counter.
  • Consumers' Cooperation Prevents Waste and Produces True Economy. Duplicated milk wagons, delivery trucks, and all the wastes of competitive factories and distribution systems organized as a result of the urge for private profits are eliminated under cooperation. These wasted hours of working time can be saved and used for real culture and recreation and not for fighting one another like barbarians—even though today -men use gloved hands to grab the most.
  • Consumers' Cooperatives Promote Peace. They are the necessary economic foundation to prevent war, which is caused by competition for markets to dispose of the surpluses that capitalism cannot distribute among the workers who produce the food and goods. Cooperatives remove the barriers to trade.
  • Consumers' Cooperative Ownership and Control of Industry is the Key that we must adopt to open the door of Plenty for All. It will distribute the piled up surpluses which automatic power driven machinery has produced.
  • Consumers' Cooperative Organization Gives the People Ownership, which Workers' Organizations do not. We have thought of ourselves as producers and organized into occupational groups. "For a century and a half," says Professor Fairchild, who wrote the book "Profits or Prosperity," "we have been trained to think of ourselves as producers instead of as consumers .—one of the most remarkable instances of inverted logic on a large scale that mankind has ever displayed." Organizing as producers is, as Mrs. Webb says, organizing the servant side of our lives, while organizing as consumers is organizing as masters of our lives. George W. Russell says, that when we organize as producers and not as consumers we are like an army that gives back to the enemy all it has won at the end of each week. Organizing as producers only is "fighting with one hand behind our backs." Organizing as consumers into Cooperatives will give us ownership and real power. The dollar we spend is more powerful than the dollar we get.
  • Consumers' Cooperative Organization Gives Us Democratic Liberty with Economic Justice which Political State Organizations Do Not. Political State organizations suppress liberty.—they are compulsory. Consumers' Cooperation gives us economic democracy—it is voluntary. While we are getting economic justice we must also have democratic freedom.
  • Consumers' Cooperation will Complete the Struggle for Liberty and Justice for ALL. We have deceived ourselves into thinking that religious, educational and political liberty were really possible without economic liberty and justice. Now we know they are not. Consumers' Cooperation finally fulfills liberty and justice for ALL. It gives every consumer equality in the control of business. It is democracy in our economic life.
 
— excerpted from the May, 1934, issue of Cooperation, http://fax.libs.uga.edu/hd2951xc776/

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Cooperative Grocers' Association website

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links

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