Title: Research on African Cooperatives
1Research on African Cooperatives
2What is this?
- This is a study program funded by DFID. It is
part of the Cooperating out of Poverty Campaign.
The program has been initiated by ILOs
Cooperative Branch in collaboration with the ICA
and is coordinated by HIVA (University of Leuven,
Belgium).
3Research objective
- This 12-month project aimed at assessing the
contribution and potential of cooperatives and
group-based enterprises to create decent
employment, economic activities, basic social
protection and voice and representation in
Africa.
4Research parts
- Historical weight of cooperative traditions in
Africa
- Rapid appraisal of the cooperative sector in 16
African countries
- In-depth studies in 11 countries by professional
researchers in 2005
5Methodology
- Rapid appraisal by cooperative insiders in 16
African countries
- Burkina Faso, Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Mozambique,
Tanzania, Rwanda
- Niger, Senegal, Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya,
Uganda, Rwanda, South Africa, Cape Verde
6Rapid appraisal
- Desk-study carried out by apex or govt staff
- Gathering available data on legislation, type of
governmental involvement, donors, structure and
extent of the movement (incl. numbers)
- Rapid appraisal and at the same time as starting
point for the country studies
7Methodology
- 11 case study countries carried out by qualified
local researchers
8Elements in the choice of the 11 countries
- Diversity of regions and language groups
- Representative populous countries (and some
smaller ones)
- Easiness of access of data and information
- Continuity with WB study (1993) and our own
survey (15 countries)
9Countries chosen
- Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda
- Senegal, Niger
- Rwanda
- Cape Verde
- Ethiopia, RSA, Egypt
- Representing 52.1 of total African population
10Subject of the country studies
- Strengths, weaknesses and potential of
cooperatives and the cooperative movement
- Role of government and donors
- Significance of coops for employment, poverty
reduction, social protection and voice
representation
- Common features differences
11Methodological set-up
- Studies subcontracted to 11 researchers in 11
African countries
- Based upon an extensive checklist
- Briefing meeting Nairobi (Sept 2005)
- Research peer-review
- Debriefing, validation consultation meetings
Addis Abeba (March 2006), Nairobi (April 2006)
12The extent of the cooperative sector
- Use of a broad definition of cooperatives
- Group-based, autonomous enterprises with open
and voluntary membership and democratic
governance, ILO Rec. 193
13The extent of the cooperative sector
14The extent of the cooperative sector
- Extrapolation for Rwanda and Nigeria
- 150 000 cooperatives or cooperative type of
businesses
- Keep in mind that some are dormant
- Semi cooperatives were not counted
- Average penetration rate is of 7
15The extent of the cooperative sector
- Huge differences between countries
- Egypt, Senegal, Ghana, Kenya and Rwanda 10
- Niger, Uganda and Cape Verde 1-2
- In some countries (i.e. Egypt, Senegal and Ghana)
average size of coops tends to be large (about
800 to 1 000 members)
16The extent of the cooperative sector
- Country studies reveal that large coops can be
found in traditional cooperative sectors such
as agriculture and credit
- New generation of coops involved in new crops,
distribution, tourism, tends to be based on
smaller groups
17Structure and integration
- The classic movement model does not exist in
practice (except Egypt and Kenya)
- Bottom-up growth, networking and integration take
place between cooperatives involved in similar
trades or industries
18Basic thrusts of the sector
- Client-owned agricultural cooperatives dominate
in members
- Savings and credit cooperatives dominate in
financial strenght
- In Kenya, Nigeria, Niger and Rwanda, savings and
credit coops (SACCOs) are the 2nd largest
cooperative sector
19Basic thrusts of the sector
- Most cooperatives are initiated, composed and run
by men
- In Kenya, 75 of the membership of Kenya
agricultural cooperatives is male
- but in other sectors such as SACCOs or consumer
cooperatives women have more important position
- The case of South Africa
20Vibrancy of African cooperatives
- Members of successful coops have a group identity
and participate in the associative life of the
cooperative
- Most of the vibrant coops had an explicit mission
statement and a clear vision (e.g. Niger)
21Vibrancy of African cooperatives
- The dynamic cooperatives rely and insist on local
capital mobilization
- They seek market niches and marketable products,
invest in quality management (e.g. Nucafe in
Uganda)
- The successful coops reveal that governance
elements play a crucial role in harnessing the
different associative and business forces in a
cooperative
22External patrons governments and donors
- Despite the 1995 ICA Statement and the ILO Rec.
193 many African countries still rely on an
outdated and dysfunctional or obsolete legal
framework
23External patrons governments and donors
- Three types of development partners
- Large international or bilateral development
agencies WB, ILO, FAO, and GTZ
- Cooperatives movements from the North CCA, SCC,
ACDI-VOCA and DGRV
- Internation cooperative structures ICA and
WOCCU
24External patrons governments and donors
- Support to the cooperative sector in Africa is
still mostly channelled through government
departments (e.g. in Nigeria, Kenya, Niger and
Egypt) through apex-bodies or secondary
cooperatives (e.g. in Ghana, SA and Rwanda) or to
support agencies
25Significance of coops for employment
- Self-employment of the members
- Ghana 209145, Rwanda150000, Uganda6000-15000
- Staff of coop institutions
- 77400 in Kenya, 28000 in Ethiopia, 9500 in Egypt
26Significance of coops for poverty reduction
- Most members qualify as poor
- Saccos loans to overcome seasonal income
fluctuations (food, school fees)
- Coops can not fight against poverty alone
27Significance of coops for social protection
- Saccos risk-mitigating strategy by imposed
saving
- Members and personnel set up ad hoc solidarity
mechanisms to cater for expenses related to
wedding ceremonies, illness, death or funerals,
etc.
28Significance of coops for voice and representation
- No perception of the coop movement as a societal
representative
- Lacking upwards communication within the coop
sector
- Some dynamic federations exist (e.g. Rwanda,
Senegal and Niger)
- Coops not included in stakeholders for poverty
reduction policies (PRSPs)
29- Thank you for your attention!!!