National Cooperative Policy, 2025

Context
  • The Union Ministry of Cooperation unveiled the National Cooperation Policy – 2025, marking a transformative moment in the history of India’s cooperative movement.


About

  • First Policy: India’s first National Cooperation Policy was introduced in 2002.

  • Second Policy: The 2025 Policy represents a renewed commitment to making cooperatives competitive, inclusive, and future-ready.

Pillars of the Policy:

  1. Strengthening the Foundation

  2. Promoting Vibrancy

  3. Preparing Cooperatives for the Future

  4. Enhancing Inclusivity & Expanding Reach

  5. Expanding into New Sectors

  6. Preparing the Younger Generation

Objectives:

  • Triple the cooperative sector’s contribution to GDP by 2034.

  • Increase cooperative societies by 30% from the current 8.3 lakh.

  • Bring 50 crore new or inactive citizens into active cooperative participation.

  • Establish at least one cooperative unit in every village & set up 5 Model Cooperative Villages in every tehsil (supported by NABARD).

  • Establish PACS or primary cooperative units in every panchayat.


What are Cooperatives?

  • A cooperative is an organization/business owned and operated by a group of individuals who share a common interest or goal.

  • One-member, one-vote principle: Equal participation in decision-making regardless of capital contribution.

  • Purpose: To meet the economic, social, or cultural needs of members rather than to maximize profits for external shareholders.


Cooperatives as India’s Economic Backbone

  • Empowerment: Small farmers, artisans, fishermen, women & labourers gain collective bargaining power.

    • Example: Amul uplifted millions of dairy farmers, many landless or marginal.

  • Strengthening Rural Economy: Over 65% of India’s population lives in rural areas; cooperatives provide credit, inputs, marketing & infrastructure.

    • Example: PACS are the first point of credit delivery in rural India.

  • Promoting Self-Reliance: Reduces dependence on middlemen & large corporations by pooling local resources for production, processing & marketing.


97th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2011

  • Made the right to form cooperative societies a fundamental right (Article 19).

  • Added Directive Principle of State Policy on promotion of cooperatives (Article 43B).

  • Added Part IX-B to the Constitution: “The Cooperative Societies” (Articles 243-ZH to 243-ZT).

  • Authorized Parliament to make laws for multi-state cooperatives & state legislatures for other cooperatives.


Government Initiatives

  • National Cooperative University: Foundation laid for ‘Tribhuvan Sahkari University (TSU)’ in Anand, Gujarat.

  • Model Cooperative Village (MCV): Implemented by NABARD in selected villages of Gujarat.

  • Ministry of Cooperation: Established in 2021 to focus on the sector.

  • Empowerment of Scheduled Cooperative Banks: Treating them on par with commercial banks.

  • Sahkar Taxi: Launched for profit-sharing with drivers.

  • Three national-level multi-state cooperative societies: For export promotion, seed production, and branding & marketing of organic products.

  • White Revolution 2.0: Focus on women’s participation.

  • Expansion of PACS: Into Jan Aushadhi Kendras, fuel distribution, LPG delivery, and rural infrastructure services.

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