The rationale for the development of associations
controlled by farmers is strong and further gaining momentum,
according to a new World Bank Report released in Beijing
today.
The report China: Farmers Professional Associations,
Review and Policy Recommendations focuses on groups with economic
functions, aiming to increase the incomes of their members by
enhancing their effectiveness or efficiency in agricultural
production and/or marketing.
China's membership in the
WTO, changing consumer demands towards higher-value products, and a
shift towards integrated market chains are all forces driving a
rapid and profound change of the agricultural sector. While the
opportunities for China's agriculture are substantial, enormous
challenges exist for the hundred millions of small-scale farming
households to effectively participate in, and benefit from these
transformations.
"A key solution is for farmers to take collective
action by forming their own groups or associations that assist them
in meeting these challenges," said Sari Soderstrom, the World
Bank’s Rural Sector Coordinator for China. Government support for
farmer-controlled groups has increased, especially since the
beginning of this decade, and significant progress in the
development of farmer associations has been made. Nevertheless,
while the vast majority of farmers around the World are organized
in farmer cooperatives or other forms of farmer-controlled
associations, in China only a few percent of farmers are members of
such groups.
"Further support from the Government it crucial. It
needs to find the appropriate role in what is essentially private
initiatives and activities, and is faced with the challenge of
further developing a conducive legal, regulatory and policy
framework," said Achim Fock, World Bank Senior Economist for Rural
Development and one of the authors of the Report. The new law on
“Farmers' Cooperative Economic Organizations," which is being
prepared by the National People's Congress, could be the single
most important factor for the sustained success of farmer
associations in China.
Whether the law will indeed play that role depends,
not the least, on an effective campaign for its implementation.
"There is a need to publicize the law and promote a common
understanding of farmer associations and farmer cooperatives, e.g.
how they can be defined, how they should operate, how they are
formed and governed, and what they can be expected to achieve or
not to achieve," the report says.
While direct financial support might not the most
effective use of public resources and, if wrongly applied
undermines the development of farmer-controlled associations, there
are many areas in which the Government can help also through active
interventions. In addition to the publicizing and
awareness-raising, this includes training to farmers, farmer
associations and local Government officials; business-services;
applied research; and technical assistance, e.g. through so-called
"promoters" or "facilitators." The Government might partly finance
these activities, but a diversity of delivery mechanisms could
complement each other, including research institutes, private
businesses, local consultants, Civil Society Organization, and
existing associations.
(China Development Gateway October 19,
2006)
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