Cebu Daily News
8:42 am | Thursday, October 20th, 2011
The 1st Central Visayas Co-op Solidarity Council conference reels off today at the Waterfront Cebu City Hotel and Casino in barangay Lahug, a three-day activity that brings together more than 700 coop leaders from all over the central islands.
The CVCSC meet will also kick off the 2012 International Year of Cooperatives, a United Nations-sponsored observance that aims to highlight the contribution of the sector to global socioeconomic development, particularly its impact on poverty reduction, employment generation and social integration. The International Cooperative Alliance is the main driver of this celebration and in the Philippines the Central Visayas co-ops are firing the opening salvo.
The business of cooperatives does not generate the kind of excitement that usually goes with corporate events that feature celebrities and loads of freebies, but if you happen to interact with the cooperative sector nowadays, you could sense an excitement that comes only with big and significant developments never before experienced by the movement in the Philippines.
I’m talking about the thrust of President Noynoy Aquino in turning to co-op concepts and experts in crafting and implementing his administration’s poverty reduction programs.
I recall that in the Asian Institute of Management policy conference “Pathways to High and Inclusive Growth” last Sept. 23, National Anti-Poverty Commission lead convenor Joel Rocamora mentioned the co-ops as a critical link in poverty reduction strategies because of its proven track record.
Early this week, President Aquino issued Administrative Order 21, which set specific criteria in the selection of sectoral representatives who could participate in the assemblies of NAPC. The National Sectoral Assembly (NSA) cuts across 1,300 basic sector organizations from all over the country. Considered the most vulnerable to poverty are “artisans, fisher folk, children, farmers, indigenous peoples, nongovernment organizations, persons with disabilities, senior citizens, urban poor, victims of disasters, women, political parties, formal labor and migrant workers, workers in the informal sector, youth and students.”
I’m happy to report that one of those who made it to National Sectoral Assembly (NSA) is Mercedes “Ched” Castillo, chief executive officer of Victo National, a cooperative training and development center based in Cebu City. In the NAPC’s perspective, the co-op has a mandate not just to further strengthen affiliates but to diffuse the benefits of the co-op system by bringing in it the poorest of the poor communities.
Political observers note that by issuing A.O. 21, the President
returned to the people the power to select their representatives in the
lead agency tasked to reduce if not purge poverty. It has been reported
that in previous years, many civil society groups were excluded from
joining the NAPC because of their critical stance to the previous
administration. The disenfranchisement of the basic sectors from the
process of looking for viable solutions to the problem of poverty has
politicized the agency and further marginalized those who live in the
fringes of society.
As of June 10, 2010, there are 15,458 registered cooperatives nationwide with combined membership of 6,778,037, P163.01 billion in total assets and P186.07 billion in authorized capital. Of these, P58.25 billion is subscribed and P34.08 billion is paid, says the state regulatory body Cooperative Development Authority (CDA).
The work of the cooperatives and the logistical support of the government
would look like a partnership made in heaven. However, I heard that
some co-ops are unhappy with too much regulation. There are reports that
some elements in the CDA are making it difficult for co-ops to perform
well, so some quarters are demanding self-regulation.
I think P-Noy should look closely at the workings of the CDA. His
centerpiece anti-poverty program cannot be compromised by government
officials who persist in their wang-wang mentality.
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