Co-op 101: Does The Co-op Model Fit Your Needs?

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Extension and Outreach / Department of Economics Co-op 101: Does The Co-op Model Fit Your Needs? Cooperating to Grow Your Farm Iowa Farmers Union Webinar March 20, 2017 Keri L. Jacobs, Asst. Professor & Extension Economist Iowa Institute for Cooperatives Endowed Economics Professor

A cooperative is a business owned and democratically controlled by the people who use its services and whose benefits are derived and distributed equitably on the basis of use. USDA, 1997 a user-owned and user-controlled business that distributes benefits on the basis of use. Barton, D., 1968 in Cooperatives in Agriculture, p. 1

DRIVER OF CO-OP MODEL IN IOWA: NEED 3

The Problem Railroad movement (1840s 1870s) led to rapid expansion and fueled the industrial revolution Farmers were largely left behind o little representation in Washington D.C. o no mechanism for organizing formally Producers had no way to be on even footing with their trade partners, and no options. 4

The Solutions Beginning in 1850s, farmer associations began to form, but these came under attack. Sherman Antitrust Legislation, 1890 Clayton Act, 1914 It wasn t until 1922 that producers could form organizations to act collectively, legally. Capper-Volstead Act 5

Capper-Volstead Requirements o o o o One member one vote OR limit dividends on nonfarmer equity to 8% Member business must be greater than nonmember business All voting members must be agricultural producers Association must operate for the benefits of its members Allows producers to organize voluntarily to produce, handle, and market farm products to improve their terms of trade. 6

Iowa Cooperative Statutes Chapter 499 associations formed after 1935 Voting membership limited to persons engaged in producing a product marketed by the association or uses the supplies or commodities or the person uses the services that the association renders. (499.13) Gives producer organizations the authority to engage in any lawful purpose and to exercise any power suitable or necessary, or incident to, accomplishing any of its powers Can have voting and non-voting members One vote per voting member (499.2) Effectively limits capital provision to members

Iowa Cooperative Statutes Chapter 501 New Generation cooperative Closed membership members are only those that provide equity capital Often for value-added processing Members buy the right to delivery obligations these are their equity shares (addresses undercapitalization problem) Chapter 501A 2005 Allows capital contribution by non-patron members with voting rights Considered the best of both worlds of 499 co-ops and limited liability companies because the co-op can pay dividends on capital.

Rochdale Principles (1844) Open and voluntary membership (equality of sexes) Democratic control Economic participation by members limited interest on invested capital limitation on number of shares Net savings distributed according to patronage Goods sold at regular retail price (market pricing) Member education Cash trading Political & religious neutrality No undue assumption of risk

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE A CO-OP MEMBER? ECONOMIC PARTICIPATION A MEMBERS RESPONSIBILITY

Economic justification, even today Competitive Yardstick role Measure against which other businesses can be compared Evidence of normal returns to activities when savings are distributed Establish markets to: Missing services Economies of size Efficiencies in transactions Capture market power Pool risks

Other Benefits To Producers Improve or standardize product quality Form a community of like-minded producers Favorable tax treatment Pooled skills 12

Economic motivations A cooperative balances among many objectives: Co-op profits Member profits Patronage Lowest/highest net price Cost minimization Quantity maximization But, it cannot do all of these. Boards make decisions about what the co-op will pursue.

Cooperatives MUST be profitable Profitability is necessary for Financial sustainability of the cooperative Ability to reinvest in assets and productive resources Ability to revolve equity Funds for growth 14

Profits Contribute to Member Value Patronage (cash or allocated equity) a distribution of co-op profits (aka savings ) to those who did business with the cooperative. a cooperatives adherence to the service at cost principle, and Unallocated Equity permanent capital, provision of investment in assets that generate returns at the co-op level and member-level. 15

but profits are NOT the only value Patronage - do your members understand it, and where it comes from? Why CAN T they have their patronage up front? Governance perhaps the least-appreciated and most over-looked component of value. Are you prepared to respond to the objection, My vote means less now since there are so many members? Community are you telling the story about the impact of the co-op in the community? Taxes, wages, education support, etc. 16

but profits are NOT the only value Price an important component, but not the only one, and perhaps the co-op does not intend to be a price-leader. That is OK. Service are you high touch, high service? This costs money. Existence Value what are the producers options without their co-op? Would those competing companies behave in the same manner on price and service absent the co-op?

What happens with Profits? Allocated Patronage Qualified Member Pays Tax Cash Patronage Refund Allocated Equity Redeem Later Patronage Non Qualified Tax Transfers Allocated Equity Redeem Later Net Savings before taxes Unallocated Not Qualified Co-op Pays Tax Dividends Net Retained Earnings Cash Patronage Refund Allocated Patronage Not Qualified Retained Patronage Refund Non Patronage Income Tax Unallocated Not Qualified Dividends Net Retained Earnings 18 David Barton s Savings Distribution Model Income Tax

Type of Equity 1. Stocks and Subscriptions The direct initial investment (cash purchase) made to join the cooperative (partial is subscription) The new member gets a membership certificate or share of common stock. This conveys voting rights and Class A Membership. A new member may earn membership by doing business with the cooperative, the patronage from which is applied to the stock subscription fee until it is satisfied. 19

Type of Equity 2. Allocated Equity The portion of a cooperative s equity that results from member business with the cooperative. Members are allocated a portion of the year s profits, some of which is equity held in the cooperative with the member s name on it until it is redeemed to the them NON-PERMANENT EQUITY This is the member s allocated equity (allocated patronage). The allocation of equity increases the member s ownership 20

Type of Equity 3. Unallocated Equity / Retained Savings The portion of a cooperative s equity that results from member or non-member business. A portion of the year s profits (net savings) are not allocated to members and instead held as common equity. This amount will not be redeemed to patronmembers as patronage in the future - PERMANENT EQUITY. 21

Members Should Understand the decision to use a cooperative is also the decision to capitalize one the two cannot be separated. capitalization of a cooperative can be slow because co-ops generally cannot solicit nonmember investors. members support the co-op by using it, and recognizing that profits (patronage) can only be distributed IF the co-op is profitable and has excess savings beyond normal returns to factor inputs (management, skill, assets, investments).

A Fundamental Difference By construction, cooperatives put the economic interests of a particular class of patron in front of all other stakeholders and look to patron owners for risk capital and leadership 23

WHO BEARS THE RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE FUNCTIONS OF YOUR COOPERATIVE? GOVERNANCE

Chain of Command 25

In Iowa, there are only THREE things a co-op board alone cannot do 1. Elect / remove directors 2. Change/amend the Articles of Incorporation 3. Lose control, sell, or lease more than 50% of the co-op s assets

Board Functions Represent the Membership Oversee the Business Decision Making Decision Making Advisory Advisory Trustee Trustee Perpetuating Perpetuating Symbolic

THE CO-OP MODEL IS UNIQUE

Business Structure Comparison o Sole proprietorship o Partnership o Limited liability company o Investor-owned corporation o Cooperative corporation Capitalized by users Controlled by users Differences in: Motives Decision Control Liability Benefits Taxes

Business Structure Comparison Cooperative Owners are users Benefit tied to use Democratic control: one member, one vote Eligibility to vote requires approval Owners must qualify Single taxation on savings from member business Non Co-op Corporation Owners not required to use Benefit not tied to use Vote proportional to stock shares Voter eligibility tied to investment Contribute equity Double taxation on profits

Business Structure Comparison Cooperative Owners are users Profits distributed on use Democratic control: one member, one vote Eligibility to vote requires approval Member/owners requires production at risk Single taxation on savings from member business L.L.C. Same Distributed on investment Control proportional to investment Voter eligibility tied to investment Member/Owner requires contribute equity Same

Questions? Keri L. Jacobs e: kljacobs@iastate.edu www.econ.iastate.edu/people/keri-jacobs Twitter @keriljacobs