A Strategy for Sustainable Development of Cooperatives in Developing Countries: The Success and Failure Case of Agricultural Cooperatives in Musambira Sector, Rwanda
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Review
2.2. Research Methodology
2.3. Cooperative Movement in Rwanda
3. Results
3.1. General Information of the SMU Program in South Korea and Rwanda
3.1.1. SMU in South Korea
3.1.2. Rwanda SMU ODA Program and Its Implementation
3.1.3. SMU ODA Program in Gihogwe Village
3.2. Banana Producers’ Cooperative in Gihogwe Village
3.2.1. Banana Plantation Project and Cooperative
- Marketing for increased banana production
- Reducing costs through joint purchase
- Securing project sustainability
- Diversification of businesses other than banana production.
3.2.2. Registration Process
3.2.3. The decline of KOPABUGI
Marketing Failure and Falling Market Prices
Wrong Decision-Making and Failure of Loan Repayment
Lack of Leadership and Misconduct of Board Members
3.2.4. Causal Analysis of KOPABUGI’s Failure
Lack of Capacity of the Board Members
Lack of Capacity of the KOPABUGI Members
3.3. Gihogwe Rice Producers’ Cooperative, CODARIKA
3.4. Comparison of KOPABUGI and CODARICA
4. Discussion: Cooperatives and Social Open Innovation
5. Conclusions
5.1. Policy Proposal to Improve the Effectiveness of Aid
5.1.1. Aid Agency
Empowerment of the Cooperative
Consistent Support
Systematic Support and Exit Strategy
5.1.2. Cooperative
Clear Target Setting
Ownership
Long-Term Goals
5.1.3. Implication
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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(Unit: No., %, No., %, No., %, Rwf, Rwf) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Economic Activity | No. of Coops. | Ratio | Membership | Share Capital (b) | b/a | ||||
Male | % | Female | % | Total(a) | |||||
Agriculture | 2433 | 29 | 179,510 | 60 | 118,486 | 40 | 297,996 | 4,878,087,148 | 16,370 |
Livestock | 1652 | 19.7 | 46,834 | 51 | 44,923 | 49 | 91,757 | 3,991,748,925 | 43,503 |
Trading | 1207 | 14.4 | 29,507 | 53 | 26,609 | 47 | 56,116 | 8,310,857,882 | 148,101 |
Service | 908 | 10.8 | 23,077 | 63 | 13,534 | 37 | 36,611 | 2,010,426,884 | 54,913 |
Transport | 542 | 6.5 | 21,912 | 89 | 2,731 | 11 | 24,643 | 1,764,398,500 | 71,598 |
Handicraft | 979 | 11.7 | 14,113 | 47 | 16,179 | 53 | 30,292 | 1,894,282,580 | 62,534 |
Transformation | 98 | 1.2 | 3920 | 60 | 2648 | 40 | 6568 | 745,505,500 | 113,506 |
Mining | 121 | 1.4 | 1971 | 80 | 500 | 20 | 2471 | 602,422,000 | 243,797 |
Fishing | 94 | 1.1 | 3540 | 77 | 1080 | 23 | 4620 | 162,422,000 | 35,156 |
Housing | 160 | 1.9 | 4930 | 71 | 2053 | 29 | 6983 | 4,803,614,000 | 687,901 |
Other | 198 | 2.4 | 5096 | 63 | 3047 | 37 | 8143 | 498,431,800 | 61,210 |
Sub Total | 8391 | 100 | 334,410 | 59 | 231,790 | 41 | 566,200 | 29,662,021,319 | 52,388 |
Internal Environment of Cooperatives | |
---|---|
Internal Weaknesses | External Opportunities |
Weakness in causal aspect • Weak internal communication system • Lack of infrastructure (soft, hard) • Limited financial and human resources • Aging members and limited innovation • Limited skills in cooperative management and governance | • Existence of political will • Aligned with the national development framework • Strong institutional and policy frameworks • Existence of available support from development partners and other stakeholders • Regional integration • Accountable governance development niches for cooperatives • Strong emphasis on performance and delivery |
Weakness in consequential aspect • Limited ownership of members • Weak self-help and diligence capacities of members, which underpin the lack of sustainability of cooperatives • Failure to make decisions • Limited social, economic, and institutional benefits to cooperative members |
Category | 1st Year | 2nd Year | 3rd Year | 4th Year | 5th Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Capacity building | - Mindset changing education | ||||
- Adult literacy class - ECD - Youth club - Women’s club | - Social development lessons | ||||
Living environment | - Village hall construction | - Modern stove - House repairing | |||
Income increase | - Rice farming project - Rice cooperative | ||||
- Livestock bank - Livestock bank association | |||||
- Banana project - Banana cooperative |
Supply | Quantity (kg) | Sales Income * (RWF) | Transportation Cost (RWF) | Ratio of Transport to Sales (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 4500 | 360,000 | 50,000 | 13.9 |
2nd | 5500 | 440,000 | 70,000 | 15.9 |
3rd | 9500 | 760,000 | 120,000 | 15.8 |
Total | 19,500 | 1,560,000 | 240,000 | 15.4 |
Rice Co-op & Livestock Bank & Banana Project | Rice Co-op & Banana Project | Livestock Bank & Banana Project | Banana Project Only | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Banana Project members | 24 | 20 | 40 | 65 | 149 |
Sub-total | 44 * | 105 ** | |||
Banana Co-op member | 40 *** | 84 **** | 124 |
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Paddy area | 3 ha | 12 ha | 15 ha | 30 ha | 45 ha | 80 ha |
Cooperative members | 65 | 65 | 88 | 164 | 289 | 370 |
CODARIKA | KOPABUGI | |
---|---|---|
Establishment | With 65 members in 2011 | With 124 members in 2015 |
Project period | 5 years (2011~2016) | 2 years (2014~2016) |
Status quo | 1054 members Covering over 10 villages | Around 50 members in only Gihogwe village |
Main goal | - Increase productivity - Lower agricultural costs through joint purchases | - Marketing and joint sales - Expansion of the cultivated area of the improved banana variety - Lower agricultural costs through joint purchases |
Farming | - Each member grows rice on the allocated 2 plots of land in large-scale farmland reclaimed from marshlands | - Each member grows bananas in their own field in village |
Challenges in farming | - Water supply and irrigation - Weather (flood and drought) - Disease- Management of seed germination - Increase productivity | - Water supply - Weather (drought) - Disease |
Income | - Rice sales - Depending on the yield of rice from 2 plots | - Banana sales - Value added can be created through banana processing; for example, banana wine, chips, juice, etc. - Members can expand their cultivation area according to the size of land owned by individuals |
Support by agency | - For 5 years (2011~2016) - Construction of infrastructure (2 dams, irrigation system, 2 storages, drying place, cooperative office) - Maintenance of infrastructure - Cost for farming and sales (seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, transportation, sacks, etc.) - Education and training for 5 years | - For 2 years (2014~2016) - Cost for farming only in 2015 (banana plants, fertilizer) - Cost for harvest (scale, sacks) - Construction of cooperative office - Education and training for 2 years |
The degree of involvement of the South Korean PMs | - High in 2011~2015 - Moderate in 2016 | - High in 2015 - Low in 2016 |
Overcoming a crisis | The misappropriation of cooperative funds by the president → Resolving the problem through continuous general meetings with all members and replacing the president → It became an opportunity to strengthen the solidarity of the cooperative members | Failure to repay the loan taken to purchase the office building site → Disposition of cooperative office to repay the loan and replacement of the president → Loss of trust among members → Cooperative virtually collapsed |
Challenges in cooperative operation | - Maintenance of cooperative facilities and infrastructure - Reduction of costs - Cooperative member management | - Marketing for joint sales - Product collection and storage - Reduction of costs - Diversification of business to create value added |
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Moon, S.; Lee, S.-h. A Strategy for Sustainable Development of Cooperatives in Developing Countries: The Success and Failure Case of Agricultural Cooperatives in Musambira Sector, Rwanda. Sustainability 2020, 12, 8632. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208632
Moon S, Lee S-h. A Strategy for Sustainable Development of Cooperatives in Developing Countries: The Success and Failure Case of Agricultural Cooperatives in Musambira Sector, Rwanda. Sustainability. 2020; 12(20):8632. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208632
Chicago/Turabian StyleMoon, Sunghye, and Sang-ho Lee. 2020. "A Strategy for Sustainable Development of Cooperatives in Developing Countries: The Success and Failure Case of Agricultural Cooperatives in Musambira Sector, Rwanda" Sustainability 12, no. 20: 8632. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208632
APA StyleMoon, S., & Lee, S. -h. (2020). A Strategy for Sustainable Development of Cooperatives in Developing Countries: The Success and Failure Case of Agricultural Cooperatives in Musambira Sector, Rwanda. Sustainability, 12(20), 8632. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208632