Cooperatives and development: lessons from the Punjab experience.
Mustafa, Khalid ; Gill, Zulfiqar Ahmad
Both in conception and practice, cooperatives in the Punjab have
been an important component of the government's development policy.
The model was conceived as a 'multipurpose unit' aimed at
serving its members by supplying credit, improved farm inputs, storage
facilities, marketing assistance etc. In practice, however the major
function has most often remained limited to the provision of credit and
the improved farm inputs. As the bulk of resources have been supplied by
the government, cooperatives are as much an agent of government
administration, as a voluntary organisation. Even from the narrow
perspective of their role as a vehicle for channelling government funds,
cooperatives have been more active in distributing loans than in
collecting these when due. The Punjab cooperatives are rural
institutions which permit collective action by the more progressive
farmers and which mediate between these farmers and the government. It
enables the administration to target benefits and regulatory policy on
that group of farmers, large or small, who contribute most to
governments development goals--those who adopt improved technology.
Nevertheless, cooperatives seem to have been less successful in
accomplishing the governments' stated purposes, as the strategy has
produced dissemination of benefits generally only to the most privileged
sections of the rural society. The wider conclusion is that the
experience in the Punjab hardly amounts to a test of the appropriateness
of the institution of cooperatives as a development agent. The divided
and hierarchical social structure of rural Punjab may point to the need
for greater appropriateness of some alternative institutional device to
encourage development.
INTRODUCTION
Traditionally, cooperatives have been expected to serve a broad set
of socio-political and economic objectives ranging from self-help and
grass-root participation to welfare and distribution, including
economies of scale and social control over resource allocation and
mobilisation. However, these various objectives are not mutually
consistent. There exists substantial trade-off in the realisation of
many of these goals. It is therefore necessary to weigh their relative
importance in the felt needs and priorities of a particular community at
any given point of time if performance of cooperatives is to be
evaluated in an appropriate context. An attempt to fulfil a range of
these conflicting objectives simultaneously has eventually led to a
broad based disenchantment with the cooperative movement.
This paper highlights two sets of issues with respect to
cooperative development. First, it discusses the concept of cooperation
and illustrates that the contradictions in the ideology and practice are
more significant in explaining the limitations of cooperatives to serve
as an instrument of development. Second, the paper points out that in
the absence of various external and internal prerequisites, especially
due to the lack of their recognition, cooperatives tend to be
inefficient relative to other forms of traditional institutions even
after receiving subsidies and other types of assistance, thus neither
achieving efficiency nor development. By analysing the area of
agricultural credit, in which cooperatives have traditionally been most
active in the Punjab, this paper illustrates various dilemmas and
contradictions and the preconditions necessary for credit cooperatives
to reach the rural poor effectively. Finally, the paper points out the
implications of the past experience for the future role of cooperatives
in Punjab.
Conceptual Framework
The basic principles underlying modern cooperatives developed in
Britain and Western Europe during the 19th century. Different
conceptions that emerged in the process of evolution of cooperative
thinking can be broadly placed in two major categories: the pragmatic
and the idealistic. In the first category may be placed the conception
that the primary aim of cooperatives is to help improve economic
conditions of those who stand to lose if they individually face powerful
interests and privileged competitors. Thus cooperation is not an
instrument to transform capitalist system and replace it by some
contrasting alternative. Instead, its distinctive institutional form is
designed to mitigate inequalities and harshness of capitalistic system
altering the distribution of its benefits in the process of making it
more workable. The idealistic ideologists however conceived of
cooperatives as an instrument to effect the transformation of the
capitalist system. They held that cooperatives were fundamentally
non-capitalistic and could co-exist with capitalism only at the risk of
becoming capitalistic themselves. (1)
The pragmatists perceive cooperatives as entirely voluntary
organisations formulated with a view to deriving economic benefits for
its members through a common enterprise on the basis of two important
criteria: mutual cooperation and self-help. According to this concept,
benefits arising from undertaking a cooperative enterprise are to be
distributed in proportion to the contributions made by individual
members. Exponents of this view conclude that unlike, European
cooperatives, those in developing countries are frequently expected to
cope with far too many constraints, and this is one of the main reasons
why cooperatives often remain ineffective in benefiting their members.
The broader concept of cooperation, on the other hand, acknowledges the
inter-action between economic and socio-political power and, therefore,
recognises the frequent need either for structural change or for
political mobilisation for cooperatives to be able to benefit their
members, especially the poor. (2)
EVOLUTION OF COOPERATIVES IN PUNJAB
Debt-peonage and chronic credit shortage were among the chief
causes of low agricultural incomes and productivity in the Indian
sub-continent, in the later half of the last century. The British
administration in the sub-continent set up various commissions of
inquiry. Among recommendations made by these commissions was the
proposal that the government enter the business of credit supply through
the introduction of cooperative credit societies. As a result, a
cooperative credit societies Act was passed in 1904 and was supplemented
by another Act in 1912. These two acts have remained a model for
cooperative legislation not only in pre-partition, but also in the post
independence, Punjab. The major organisational and operational features
of the cooperative movement in the Punjab are largely derived from the
ideas and value judgements that brought forth the movement in the
sub-continent in 1904.
The progress of cooperatives in United Punjab may be judged by
analysing performance of societies in terms of their growth and coverage
granted to rural population. The total number of primary societies in
the united Punjab increased from 699 (with 693 as agricultural and only
6 as non-agricultural societies) in 1910 to 23476 in 1938 (with 19057 as
agricultural and 4419 as non-agricultural societies). Thus, about 81
percent of primary societies in 1938 were agricultural and only 19
percent were urban societies, indicating that cooperatives remained
primarily agriculture oriented up to the end of the third decade of the
present century. This position, however slightly changed in subsequent
years. Thus out of a total of 27054 primary societies in 1945, some 77
percent were classified as agricultural and 23 percent as
non-agricultural societies.
Nevertheless, amongst the primary agricultural societies, the
cooperatives generally remained confined to the sphere of credit. Thus
out of 26873 primary agricultural societies in 1945 as many as 17603
(about 66 percent) were agricultural credit societies. On the other
hand, cooperatives in Punjab covered only 15 percent of the rural
population in 1936-1937. Even in subsequent years this position did not
change considerably. Thus in 1945, a little under 19 percent of the
rural population came under the fold of this institution in Punjab.
The creation of Pakistan in 1947 in general and division of Punjab
in particular affected the institution of cooperatives. The number,
membership and working capital of cooperatives was suddenly cut short
and the institution was worst hit at all its levels. The initial
setbacks were overcome soon and cooperatives, under government
patronage, were entrusted to funnel credit, improved seed, chemical
fertilisers and other inputs to the farm sector. In that respect,
cooperatives in Punjab have virtually acted as an instrument of the
governments' agricultural policy during the past fifty years.
DEVELOPMENT OF COOPERATIVES IN PAKISTAN PUNJAB
Organisational and Operational Features of Cooperatives
There is a two tier cooperative structure in the Punjab. At the
base or operational level in the villages are established primary
societies. These societies, in turn are affiliated to the Punjab
Cooperative Bank, organised at the provincial level. For borrowings, the
Punjab Cooperative Bank mainly depends on the Federal Bank for
Cooperatives. The bulk of the loans provided by the Federal Bank for
Cooperatives to the Punjab Cooperative Bank are advanced for financing
seasonal agricultural operations. The advances by the Punjab Cooperative
Bank to the credit societies increased considerably between 1970 and
1997. The total advances made by the Punjab Cooperative Bank to the
primary agricultural societies increased from Rs 165.13 million in 1970
to Rs 4117.39 million in 1997, with some 55 percent recovery of loans
from societies during the year 1997 (see Table 1). The loans to the
Punjab Cooperative Bank, for onward disbursement to the primary
societies are released by the Federal Bank for Cooperatives on the
approval of the State Bank of Pakistan and also on the guarantee
provided by the Government of the Punjab. The Punjab Cooperative Bank,
expected to operate on commercial lines, has not been successful in
mobilising savings especially from the rural areas, making it difficult
to supplement its own resources and with no savings of its own, it is
left with a very limited role as a development bank.
The Federal Bank for Cooperatives was established in 1976 at the
national level with the object of providing financial assistance to the
provincial Cooperative Banks in all the four provinces of Pakistan. In
addition, the Federal Bank for Cooperatives is entrusted the task of
assisting the federal and the provincial Governments in formulating
schemes for the development and revitalisation of the movement,
undertake research on problems of rural credit and other matters having
a bearing on the development of the cooperatives and assist the
provincial Cooperative Banks in preparing their seasonal development
lending programmes and undertaking appraisals as well as feasibility
studies of projects covered by such programmes. However, in practice,
the Federal Bank has served merely as a channel of credit catering for
the credit requirements of the Punjab Cooperative Bank, as also of the
other provincial Cooperative Banks. The Bank except providing loans to
provincial banks, has generally failed in realising other objectives.
(3)
Primary cooperative societies have been established at the base
level of the cooperative movement in the Punjab. These societies are
concentrated in rural areas and with in those in the field of
agricultural credit. The growth of primary societies both agricultural
and non-agricultural for the years 1980 through 1997 is given in Table
2. It can be seen from Table 2, that total number of primary societies
in the Punjab rose from 41533 in 1980 (with 23515 as agricultural credit
and 18018 as non-agricultural credit cum urban cooperatives) to 48097 in
1997 (with 35381 as agricultural credit and 12776 as non-agricultural
credit cum urban cooperatives). Thus about 73 percent of primary
societies in the Punjab in 1997 were agricultural credit and only 27
percent were nonagricultural credit cum urban societies, indicating that
the institution of cooperatives in the Punjab remained centred in the
sphere of credit.
It is against this background that the experience of agricultural
credit societies in the Punjab is now studied in detail through an
examination of the following aspects.
(a) The relative importance of credit Cooperatives among
institutional sources of finance.
(b) The absolute importance of cooperative credit in relation to
the total credit needs of farmers.
(c) The extent of local participation in, and support for
agricultural credit societies, and
(d) The welfare effects of cooperative credit distribution.
The relative importance of cooperative credit among institutional
sources of finance can be judged from the data presented in Table 3. The
share of cooperative credit in total institutional credit was
significant during the years 1950 through 1966. This was mainly
attributed to the policy of the Government in the country which showed
interest in developing and expanding the role of the cooperative credit
movement. Nevertheless, the provision of cooperative credit was not
sufficient. The Agricultural Development Bank of Pakistan was thus
established in 1961; with that the total supply of credit in the farm
sector increased, from Rs 75.12 million in 1960 to Rs 130.49 million in
1966 or by some 174 percent. Again in 1971, all commercial Banks entered
the business of rural finance. These measures enhanced the supply of
farm credit, and the share of cooperative credit among the institutional
sources of finance declined from around 60 percent in 1966 to about 8
percent in 1975. As against this, first the share of credit provided by
the Agricultural Development Bank increased, followed by that of the
commercial Banks (after 1971-72); only after 1975 did the share of
cooperative credit amongst the institutional sources increased once
again, however share of cooperative credit amongst institutional credit
ranged between 21 and 30 percent during the years 1985-97.
The measures taken by the government in the late 1970s and in
subsequent years resulted in increased provision of cooperative credit
to the farm sector. Nevertheless, this does not imply that those who
needed credit did really get it. The incentive of providing interest
free loans from late 1970s until mid 1980s (later however, cooperatives
advanced loans at concessional lending rates i.e. at a markup of 14-16
percent per annum) to members of societies was a good step, but
unfortunately it was misused partly because it was operated through
incompetent functionaries of the cooperative department, and partly
through political pressure. Consequently, the advantages that were
visualised at the time of conceiving these schemes were frustrated (4).
The estimated total credit needs of farmers in the Punjab have
never been fully met from the available supply of institutional credit.
This argument obtains support from the findings of the Rural Credit
Survey (1985). The survey recorded that 27 percent of all the rural
households including the farm and non-farm households had some recourse
to institutional credit. For the farm households this proportion was 30
percent for under 0.5 hectare category, whereas it was 44 percent for
the 60 hectares and above category. On a provincial basis, the survey
revealed that 34 percent of the under 0.5 hectare farmers' category
in the Punjab had recourse to institutional credit, as against 65
percent of the total farm households in the Punjab. (5) This shows that
access to credit was generally higher amongst large sized farm holdings.
These findings support the earlier view that insufficient credit was
available from institutional sources and that farmers depended more on
non-institutional sources to fulfil their credit needs.
Data on the working of agricultural credit societies in the Punjab
are presented in Table 4. The number of credit societies increased at
the rate of approximately 1 percent a year during 1960 through 1975.
There was a significant increase in the formation of credit societies
after 1975, as the number of societies increased from 12658 in 1975 to
23515 in 1980, showing an increase of 86 percent over the said period.
This trend continued in the subsequent period. As such, the number of
credit societies increased from 23515 in 1980 by about 50 percent in
1997(see Table 4). Thus the experience of the late 1970s is atypical and
needs explanation. The Government of the Punjab introduced the
interest-free lending policy in 1978, and used cooperatives as a vehicle
to funnel interest-free credit into the farm sector. Many more credit
societies in the Punjab were established under the directive of the
Government. New societies were generally formed by the departmental
officials without any regard to the principles of cooperation. Many
societies were established overnight just to impress the superiors up
the line with the successful implementation of the Government directive.
As such, a policy of expansion rather than consolidation was pursued by
the department from 1977 through 1980. (6) The provision of interest
free credit through cooperatives was abandoned by the government during
mid 1980s and emphasis was once again laid on consolidation rather than
expansion of agricultural credit cooperatives during late 1980s through
1997.
The Government of the Punjab made many attempts to establish
large-sized viable primary units at the base level of cooperatives, but
these attempts generally met little success. The underlying trend shown
by the data reveal that societies generally remained small-sized. There
are two reasons for such a pattern. First, the credit societies did not
provide sufficient credit; the farming population found it unattractive
to join cooperatives. Second, the attempts made by the department to
promote the institution of cooperatives were too insignificant to
persuade prospective members in rural areas to join the societies. The
Rural Credit Survey of Pakistan (1975) concluded that only 4 percent of
the rural households in Pakistan were enrolled in the movement. (7)
The Rural Credit Survey of 1985 revealed that only 1 percent of
households in the smallest sized farm category reported cooperative
membership but this proportion increased to 13 percent in the largest
size of farm category of 60 hectares and above. The cooperative
societies, according to the survey are common in the Punjab, yet only 6
percent of the total farm households reported membership. (8) These
statistics would imply that the institution of cooperatives in the
Punjab was largely centred within bigger farm households who controlled
the management of societies and imposed restrictions on the entry of new
members (with small holdings), primarily to make use of Cooperatives
provisions to themselves. (9)
Despite the increase in the number of societies, many Cooperatives
in the Punjab were regarded as economically non-viable. The Report of
the National Commission on Agriculture (1988) recorded that out of
45,000 agricultural Cooperatives in Pakistan, as much as 50 percent were
dormant, and of the remaining, probably only 5 percent were genuine,
viable and active undertakings. (10) According to a study conducted by
the Centre for Administrative Research and Development studies in the
Punjab, out of 34543 societies as many as 50 percent were found to be
inactive undertakings in 1984. (11)
One way of gauging the spread of cooperative idea, to measure the
extent to which farmers began to participate in the cooperatives, is to
examine the quantum and composition of working capital available to
societies. Total working capital available to credit societies increased
from Rs 46.51 million in 1960 to Rs 143.76 million in 1975. However,
there came about a manifold increase in the working capital available to
the credit societies after 1975. The working capital in societies was
largely derived from the borrowings (that is loans and deposits held)
rather than the share capital and reserve funds. It may be noted that
during the period 1947 through 1975, the percentage share of borrowed
funds (loans and deposits held) of societies ranged between 42 and 61
percent. Credit societies borrowed between 83 and 89 percent during the
years 1980 through 1997 (see Table 5).
Another way of assessing the performance of credit societies was to
evaluate their lending business. Total loans advanced by societies
increased from Rs 11.44 million in 1954 to Rs 79.88 million in 1975.
Thereafter there was a quantum jump in loans advanced by societies,
which increased from Rs 979.99 million in 1980 to Rs 3725.44 million in
1997 (see Table 4). Moreover, cooperative credit, as already noted, as a
share of total institutional lending increased from 8 percent in 1975 to
some 26 percent in 1997 (see Table 3).
Relevant statistics on the lending business of societies are
presented in Table 4. It may be seen that the ratio of repayment of
loans advanced was not at all bad especially during 1954-65. It tended
to stay fairly high. However, between 1970-75, the ratio dropped to less
than 0.4; in contrast during 1975-80 ratio of repayment exceeded from
less than 0.4 to a little above 0.8. The overall average repayment to
loan ratio for 1954-97 stayed at roughly 0.85. And this was not at all
that bad.
The higher recovery of loans by societies was (among other factors)
attributed to strict adherence by the department to the administrative
discipline of societies. Many defaulting members in societies were
claimed to be expelled and their debts recovered as arrears of land
revenue. Contrary to this argument critics (12) suggest that funds meant
for disbursement of loans for improved seed, chemical fertilisers and
pesticides were actually diverted towards short-term interest bearing
investments. And, through smart forgery new loans created in fictitious names were adjusted against the 'old' loans. Further, through
this practice members in societies, besides making big illegal earnings,
were able to show high recovery rates.
The data on the number of loan beneficiaries of the credit
societies for the period, 1947 through 1997 were not available from
departmental sources on regular basis. If it was assumed that member
farmers in a society actually received the maximum loan amount
prescribed, then the number of loan beneficiaries could only have been
between 4 and 15 percent of the total membership during the years
1954-75. Between 1990 and 1997 the situation became rather worst, as
only about 2.5 percent of the total membership could have been provided
with the maximum prescribed amount of loanable funds from the societies
(see Table 4). Of course, this assumption is too simplistic but it does
place the amounts loaned in proper perspective. The membership of
societies increased throughout 1954-97 and it is logical to expect that
the members in fact received loans of a lesser share of the maximum
credit limit. (13)
The proponents of the institution of cooperation contend that a
cooperative is not supposed to be a commercial business venture or a
profit making enterprise. Its objectives are largely distributional
(e.g. providing welfare to its members by ensuring provision of
subsidised loans). Of course, concessional lending can not be profitable
in a commercial sense. Past experience suggests that concessional
lending to members was a disincentive insofar as optimal productive use
of cooperative credit was concerned. The large farmers and politically
strong farming groups in Punjab were reported to have dominated
Cooperatives and annexed government funds for their own purposes. (14)
It was revealed in one study that 86 percent of the committee members
(as well as the large farmers) in societies were loan defaulters as
against 37 percent ordinary members. (15)
An important task which the Department of Cooperation in the Punjab
is expected to undertake is the regular audit and inspection of
Cooperatives. Field studies (16) undertaken in the Punjab have
established that a large number of societies remain un-audited. And this
in part is attributed to the shortage of trained and experienced staff
in the department. Moreover, the management committee members themselves
are often incompetent and often unable to record correct entries. This
practice has often made it more difficult to undertake the audit task
effectively. (17) As a result the cooperatives have been made entirely
dependent on the cooperative field staff, and have not been able to grow
as an autonomous 'self-help' institution. (18)
Effectiveness of Cooperatives as a Tool of Development
The reports of the official Government inquiries and appraisals by
independent researchers (19) indicate that Cooperatives have not
achieved the development goals set for them by economic planners. Even
though cooperatives are sponsored by the government, their activities
have little effect on the existing patterns and trends of economic
activity and their performance has little relevance to the wider context
of social and economic change and the general development strategy.
It was recognised that, without Governmental financial support and
consequently some degree of Government control, cooperatives would have
not become properly established. (20) This dependency on the Government
for the establishment and support of Cooperatives has created a dilemma
for the self-reliance of societies. The Cooperatives are so dependent on
state assistance that it is unlikely that they would survive without
Government support and replace the traditional dependency system (e.g.
paternal system) by self-reliance and community initiative, achieved
through cooperative action.
Overtime the Government has remained" liberal in providing
subsidised agricultural credit, the primary societies nevertheless often
have had at their disposal only limited supplies of credit because of
their failure to follow prescribed conditions, their inability to
generate enough capital of their own or to recover loans. The evidence
has established that much of the credit advanced by Cooperatives was not
used for productive purposes.
Even productivity considerations in Cooperatives have posed a
dilemma. While some cooperative members (generally members of the
management and other better-off farmers in societies) took undue
advantage of cooperative credit and other services, the others were not
able to do so--the result--a gulf between the better-off and the
ordinary members to the access of cooperative services--leading to
greater economic inequalities; a practice contrary to the cooperative
ideals.
The evidence has proved that there was unequal distribution of the
benefits of rural Cooperatives within rural communities. Those who were
already in more fortunate positions took advantage of the cooperative
services; the disadvantaged of the community benefited less or not at
all. Thus the Cooperatives were not effective in bringing about
structural change in the communities. The impact of the community
structure upon the Cooperatives was stronger than the impact of the
cooperative upon the community structure. (21)
CONCLUSIONS AND LESSONS
It is by no means a straightforward matter to identify causes of
inadequacies of institutional performance when social, political and
economic considerations are woven together. The fact that the
institution in question is not the product of purely local forces but
has instead been transplanted from quite different time and place adds a
further dimension to the complexity. Failure could be attributed to
rejection of the cultural transplant due to incompatibility, or to its
association with the colonial past. Alternatively, it could be due to
the absence of necessary preconditions linked to opportunities for
development and their perception by participants. But equally it could
be attributed to government manipulation of the institution, to serve a
particular and conceivably ill-suited objectives given the circumstances
prevailing in agricultural input and output markets in the 20th century
Punjab. Either the credit system itself needs to be changed or else the
objectives should be changed so as to reduce emphasis on social goals of
redistribution or relief of mass poverty and leave these goals to other
kinds of programmes.
Cooperatives will not prove successful in the communities where
class and caste structures are inegalitarian; cooperatives, in effect,
become the preserve of the middle and upper class and their
effectiveness in the community remains slight. As such cooperatives will
bring success only when these are introduced into communities which have
more flexible socio-economic structures. This would seem to be a
principal pre requisite for institutional change to occur and
cooperatives to be enabled to create a cohesive group oriented to local
socio-economic improvements.
To be effective, however, cooperatives also need to have strong
links with outside agencies, such as the secondary and apex
cooperatives, and the Department of Cooperation. In spite of the risks
of being interpreted as imposing an alien structure on local
communities, there is still a necessity for the government to play an
active role in promoting the idea of cooperation. Unless the outside
agencies ensure the training of the local leaders, assist the
cooperators in adopting new technology, provide sufficient credit and
other requisites, audit cooperative accounts regularly and discipline
those responsible for defaults and irregularities, there is no point in
expecting any success from any type of cooperative.
A radical alternative to the reform of the existing cooperative
institutions would be a policy seeking to evolve wholly new kinds of
local organisation--'units of rural action' that could more
effectively stimulate peasant participation and in particular more
effectively involve the poorer members of the local community. This will
however, need profound social economic and structural transformation of
the rural society.
To sum up, there is a pressing need for a serious review of
cooperative policy. Empirical research has established that cooperatives
failure has been less a demonstration of the irrelevance of cooperative
principles to the pursuit of development, and more a clear indication
that the annexation of the cooperative concept to serve misguided and
insensitive government policies creates organisations which are
cooperatives in name only. Such a review should consider possible
specific adjustments to cooperative methods and procedures to meet some
of the individual problems already identified.
REFERENCES
Bonner, A. (1961) British Cooperation. Manchester: Cooperative
Union.
Centre for Administrative Research and Development (1984)
Agricultural Cooperative Movement in Pakistan, Perspective, Problems and
Plan of Action. Lahore: CARD.
Chaudhry, H. A., and A. R. Rizwani (1970) Role of Cooperative
Institutions in Planned Change in West Pakistan. Faisalabad: West
Pakistan Agricultural University Press.
Chaudhry, M. A. (1998) Cooperatives in Punjab from 1990-91 to
1996-97. Lahore: Registrar Cooperatives, Government of Punjab.
Federal Bank for Cooperatives Pakistan (1977) Federal Bank for
Cooperatives Act, 1977. Islamabad: FBC.
Gill, Z. A. (1976) Organisation, Functioning and Performance of
Cooperatives in Rajana Markaz of Integrated Rural Development Programme.
Unpublished M. Sc. Thesis, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad.
Punjab, Government of (1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982)
Annual Reports on the Working of Cooperative Societies in the Punjab.
Supdt. Government Printing, Lahore.
Haroon, F. (1986) Cooperatives in Punjab 1979-85. Registrar,
Cooperatives, Government of Punjab, Lahore.
Inayatullah (1972) Cooperatives and Development in Asia: A Study of
Cooperatives in Fourteen Rural Communities of Iran, Pakistan and Ceylon,
Vol. VII. Rural Institutions and Planned Change. Geneva: UNRISD.
Khan, D. A. (1982) Delivery System in Support of Small Farmers in
the Context of Rural Development--Pakistan. Centre for Integrated Rural
Development for Asia and Pacific, CIRDAP, Comilla. (CIRDAP Series No.
21.)
Khan, M. A. (1971) Cooperatives Dilemma--A Study of Farm Credit
Cooperatives in the Punjab. WPAU Press, Lyallpur.
Khan, M. A., D. A. Khan, and M. H. Bhatti (1973) Farm Credit
Profile and Supervised Credit in Rural Pakistan. Lyallpur: University of
Agriculture Press.
Lambert, P. (1963) Studies in the Social Philosophy of Cooperation.
Cooperative Union Ltd, Manchester.
Munker, H. (1976) Cooperatives for the Rich or for the Poor, with
Special Reference to Cooperative Development and Cooperative Law in
Asia. Asian Economy 17. (June.)
Pakistan, Government of (1959) Credit Inquiry Commission Report.
Government Press, Karachi.
Pakistan, Government of (1973) Report of the International Seminar
on Integrated Rural Development organised jointly by Government of
Pakistan, UNDP and FAO at Lahore from November 3-10. Government Press,
Lahore.
Pakistan, Government of (1975) Agricultural Inquiry Committee
Report. Ministry of Food and Agriculture, Islamabad.
Pakistan, Government of (1985) Pakistan Rural Credit Survey.
Agricultural Census Organisation, Lahore.
Pakistan, Government of (1988) Report of the National Commission on
Agriculture. Ministry of Food and Agriculture, Islamabad.
Siddique, M. (1980) Farmers' Organisations and Other Local
Institutions: Cooperatives for Rural Development. Islamabad: Local
Government and Rural Development Division, Government of Pakistan.
Waheed, A. (1985) The Role of Cooperatives in the Rural Development
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(1) See Webb, Sidney and Beatrice (1921); also see Bonner (1961).
(2) See Munker (1976); also see Lambert (1963) for a detailed
account of the different approaches to cooperation.
(3) See for instance Federal Bank for Cooperatives (1977), pp.
13-44; Government of Pakistan Report of the National Commission on
Agriculture (1988), pp. 405-408.
(4) See Waheed (1985), pp. 15-18; also see Government of Pakistan
Report of the National Commission on Agriculture (1988), pp. 401-402.
(5) Government of Pakistan Rural Credit Survey (1985), pp. 514-19.
(6) The sudden increase in number of credit societies in the Punjab
did not lead to the provision of sufficient credit to the subsistence farmers. Interest free loans provided by these societies were generally
misutilised or misdirected to non-productive uses. For further
elaboration on this point see Government of Pakistan Report of the
National Commission on Agriculture (1988), pp. 399-402.
(7) See Government of Pakistan Rural Credit Survey (1985), Chapter
9.
(8) Ibid, pp. 517-520.
(9) See for instance Khan (1971), Chapters IV & V.
(10) See Government of Pakistan Report of the National Commission
on Agriculture (1988), p. 401.
(11)See Centre for Administrative Research and Development Studies
(1984), pp. 29-33.
(12) See Government of Pakistan Repoa of the National Commission on
Agriculture (1988), Chapter 23; Khan (1982), pp. 128-29.
(13) Prior to 1978, credit to cultivators was advanced on the basis
of maximum credit limit (MCL). The maximum credit limit prescribed for
the farmers for the irrigated and non-irrigated areas was fixed at Rs
1000 and Rs 600 respectively. The credit limit has had no relevance to
either the needs of the farmer or to his repayment capacity. Similarly
the MCL of a society was fixed by the central cooperative banks
irrespective of the need of the credit society. It was after 1978 that
MCL for a member farmer of credit societies was set at Rs 6000 per annum
for the purchase of improved farm inputs. Since 1984 loans to a member
in a society are advanced on per acre basis. The maximum credit limit
(MCL) has been fixed Rs 5000 per acre with a markup of 14-16 percent.
(14) See Khan (1971); Chapter V; Government of Pakistan Report of
the National Commission on Agriculture (1988); Chapter 23, also see
Inayatullah (1972).
(15) See Gill (1976), pp. 59- 60.
(16) See for instance Khan (1971); Khan et al. (1973); Government
of Pakistan Credit Inquiry Commission Report (1959); Government of
Pakistan Report of the National Commission on Agriculture (1988).
(17) See for instance Khan (1971), pp. 83-85; Siddique (1980), pp.
31-33; Gill (1976), pp. 19-20.
(18) See Government of Pakistan Report of the Seminar on Integrated
Rural Development (1973), pp. 92-102; Government of Pakistan Report of
the Agricultural Inquiry Committee (1975), pp. 19-22; Khan (1982), pp.
120-32.
(19) See Government of Pakistan Report of the National Commission
on Agriculture (1988); Government of Pakistan Credit Inquiry Commission
Report (1959); Government of Pakistan Agricultural Inquiry Committee
Report (1975); Government of the Punjab, Annual Reports on the Working
of Cooperative Societies (Various Issues).
(20) See Chaudhry and Rizwani (1970); Chapter 3; also see
Inayatullah (1972); Chapter VI.
(21) Ibid.
Khalid Mustafa and Zulfiqar Ahmad Gill are associated with the
Faculty of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, University of
Agriculture, Faisalabad.
Table 1
Loans Advanced and Recovered by the Punjab Cooperative Bank
(Rs Million)
Year Loans Advanced Loans Recovered
1970 165.13 84.48
1975 129.60 22.30
1980 883.00 874.00
1985 1374.17 1365.52
1990 1346.09 1302.82
1995 3582.64 2580.01
1997 4117.39 2278.69
Source: (a) Government of the Punjab; Annual Reports on the working
of Cooperative Societies in the Punjab (Various Issues).
(b) Haroon (1986).
(c) Chaudhry (1998).
Table 2
Growth of Cooperatives in the Punjab at a Glance
No. of Cooperatives Membership (No.)
Total Agri. All Total Agri. All
Year Credit Others Credit Others
1980 41533 23515 18018 1652426 885710 766716
1985 48557 30596 17961 2219913 1275251 944662
1990 46197 33302 12895 2400532 1460399 940133
1995 47244 34669 12575 2466549 1615326 851223
1997 48097 35381 12776 2510341 1617023 893318
Working Capital (Rs Million)
Total Agri. All
Year Credit Others
1980 2433.05 666.07 1766.98
1985 4389.76 895.43 3494.33
1990 14393.41 1840.54 12552.87
1995 10719.26 2722.70 799.56
1997 12154.12 3358.88 8795.24
Source: (a) Haroon (1986).
(b) Chaudhry (1998).
Table 3
Agricultural Loans Advanced by the Institutional Sector in the Punjab
(Rs Million)
Cooperatives Taccavi Loans
Year Loan %age Loan %age
1950 82.88 98.33 1.4 1.67
1955 31.78 92.4 2.6 7.5
1960 69.52 92.5 5.6 7.4
1966 78.39 60.0 3.8 2.9
1970 99.29 53.2 3.7 2.1
1975 81.54 8.0 12.13 1.2
1980 979.99 29.8 8.22 0.27
1985 2110.00 30.5 4.65 0.06
1990 3034.00 30.5 7.00 0.06
1995 3302.00 21.58 13.80 0.09
1997 3725.00 26.29 N.A --
Agri. Development
Bank Commercial Banks
Total
Year Loan %age Loan %age Loan
1950 -- -- -- -- 84.28
1955 -- -- -- -- 34.38
1960 -- -- -- -- 75.12
1966 48.3 37.1 -- -- 130.49
1970 77.3 44.6 -- -- 173.27
1975 396.31 39.2 52.90 51.5 1010.88
1980 711.55 23.5 1587.40 52.6 3015.79
1985 2581.00 37.4 2207.00 32.0 6902.65
1990 6225.00 56.4 1772.00 16.05 11038.00
1995 10015.00 52.5 1968.00 12.82 15298.80
1997 8648.44 61.05 1792.00 12.65 14165.44
Source: (a) Agricultural Statistics of Pakistan (1975).
(b) Punjab Development Statistics (1986).
(c) Punjab Development Statistics (1998).
Table 4
Lending Operations of Primary Agricultural Credit
Societies in the Punjab
Loans Loans
No. of Credit Total Advanced Recovered
Year Societies Membership (Rs Million) (Rs Million)
1954 8409 250000 11.44 10.35
1960 10822 396000 32.07 25.63
1965 12121 512000 34.18 43.08
1970 12652 591294 41.22 12.57
1975 12658 633674 79.88 28.25
1980 23515 885710 979.99 819.00
1985 30596 1275251 1055.71 1208.66
1990 33302 1460399 1346.09 1275.82
1995 34669 1615326 3302.70 3186.00
1997 35381 1617023 3725.44 3720.88
No. of Loan Ratio of Repayment
Year Beneficiaries to Loan Advanced
1954 11448 0.90
1960 32070 0.79
1965 34183 1.26
1970 41220 0.30
1975 79880 0.35
1980 209604 0.83
1985 472923 1.14
1990 37074 0.94
1995 36570 0.96
1997 37758 0.99
Source: Government of the Punjab; Annual Reports on the Working
of Cooperative Societies in the Punjab (Various Issues).
(a) Haroon (1986).
(b) Chaudhry (1998).
Table 5
Working Capital of Primary Agricultural Credit Societies in the Punjab
(Rs Million)
Total Working Share Reserve Deposits and
Year Capital Capital Funds Loans Held
1947 34.78 7.70 11.22 15.85
1954 24.74 3.84 10.45 10.44
1960 46.51 7.17 11.64 22.70
1965 75.09 14.01 15.23 45.84
1970 98.53 19.13 20.58 45.05
1975 143.76 22.78 24.27 87.85
1980 633.99 44.97 26.13 883.00
1985 895.43 77.69 69.47 742.16
1990 1840.54 93.88 191.28 1578.81
1995 2722.70 112.97 231.20 2373.90
1997 3358.88 120.07 243.37 2986.32
Source: (a) Government of the Punjab; Annual Reports on the working
of cooperative societies in the Punjab (Various Issues).
(b) Haroon (1986).
(c) Chaudhry (1998).