Image for Agricultural Cooperatives in Transition

Agricultural Cooperatives in Transition (1st)

See all formats and editions

Originally published in 1993, this is a study of agricultural co-operatives.

The farming structure in transition countries has shifted from dominance of large corporate farms to family smallholdings. Smallholders everywhere experience difficulties with access to market services, including sale of products, purchase of inputs, and acquisition of machinery; they suffer from credit shortages and have limited access to information and advisory services. The barriers to market access prevent smallholders from fully exploiting their inherent productivity advantages.

Best-practice world experience highlights farmers' service cooperatives, created by grassroots users, as the most effective way of improving the market access of small farmers. Service cooperatives also help smallholders overcome market failures, when private business entrepreneurs are unwilling to provide services in areas that they judge unprofitable or unfairly exploit users through monopolistic practices. These difficulties and market failures are prominent in transition countries and scholars accordingly expected rapid development of agricultural service cooperatives in response to smallholder needs. The present volume explores gaps between expectations and reality.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£140.00
Product Details
Routledge
0429715846 / 9780429715846
eBook (EPUB)
334.683
28/11/2021
England
English
428 pages
Copy: 30%; print: 30%
Reprint. Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed. Originally published: Boulder: Westview Press, 1993.