Cooperatives as a Labour-Economic Institution: A Grassroots Strategy for Absorbing Displaced Agricultural Stakeholders in India and Beyond

Abstract India is experiencing a structural squeeze in agriculture: average operational land-holdings are shrinking, resource endowments are under pressure, and rural households face growing livelihood vulnerability. Under these conditions, cooperatives emerge as an institutional mechanism to absorb...

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Published inINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH IN ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENT Vol. 9; no. 8; pp. 1 - 9
Main Authors Kadam, Dr. Mahesh, Borkar, Dr. Amit
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 15.08.2025
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Summary:Abstract India is experiencing a structural squeeze in agriculture: average operational land-holdings are shrinking, resource endowments are under pressure, and rural households face growing livelihood vulnerability. Under these conditions, cooperatives emerge as an institutional mechanism to absorb displaced agricultural stakeholders by transforming small-scale family producers into collective, market-oriented enterprises that integrate production, processing, marketing, credit and training. Drawing on labour-economics theory (search-frictions and matching), empirical identification techniques (natural experiments), and institutional economics, this review synthesizes evidence from India (dairy and sugar cooperatives), China (land-shareholding cooperative innovations), and international literature on cooperative impacts on employment and income stability. The paper proposes a testable conceptual framework where cooperatives act as labour-market intermediaries that reduce search and coordination frictions, raise bargaining power, enable local industrialization (value-addition and processing), and stabilize real incomes — thereby moderating inflationary pressure at the household level. We compile and critique empirical findings (positive impact on household income and rural employment, but mixed governance outcomes), identify mechanisms (asset pooling, vertical integration, training and technology diffusion), and provide methodological guidance for future evaluations (difference-in-differences, matching, instrumental variables, and natural-experiment approaches). Policy implications emphasize enabling law, capacity building, finance, and governance reforms to scale cooperative-led local industrialization as a strategic labour-absorption pathway. Key words: Cooperatives, Labour, employment, industrialization, institutions, innovations
ISSN:2582-3930
2582-3930
DOI:10.55041/IJSREM51832