Strengthening State Cooperative Policies: Key Priorities In Light of the National Cooperative Policy 2025

Dr.S.L.N.T.Srinivas

Dr.S.L.N.T.Srinivas

Expert in Cooperative Governance & Management

Member, All India Authors Group

NCCT: Ministry of Cooperation, Govt. of India

Introduction

The National Cooperative Policy 2025 articulates a comprehensive vision for cooperation in India—Sahakar Se Samriddhi—seeking to transform cooperatives into vibrant agents of rural empowerment, inclusivity, and economic resilience. As States and Union Territories move to craft or revise their own cooperative policies, alignment with the national framework is crucial. Thoughtful State-level policies can translate national objectives into local action, respecting regional diversity while ensuring consistency. Below are several priority elements that State governments should emphasise when preparing Cooperative Policies, drawing from both the National Policy’s mandates and lessons from cooperative practice.

Key Priority Elements for State Cooperative Policies

 

  1. Village- & Panchayat-Level Coverage and Multipurpose PACS

 

One of the National Policy’s core directives is the establishment of 200,000 multipurpose Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS), dairy, and fishery cooperatives in uncovered Panchayats/Villages within a defined timeframe. For State policies, this means:

  • Mapping all existing cooperative coverage gaps at village/Panchayat level.
  • Enabling new PACS formation in each Panchayat so that cooperative service delivery is locally accessible.
  • Ensuring PACS are empowered to serve beyond traditional credit functions — as multipurpose entities providing inputs, procurement, storage, insurance, health, or retail services under one roof.

This helps deepen reach, reduce transaction costs for rural members, and anchor cooperative presence in all communities.

 

  1. Digital Adoption, Transparency, and Good Governance

 

The National Cooperative Policy emphasises the need for computerisation of PACS, digital platforms, data-driven governance, and periodic monitoring. States must prioritize:

  • Adopting model byelaws / bye-laws that enforce transparency in elections, auditing, and financial disclosures.
  • Rolling out computerisation of PACS and tying them to a national cooperative database for real-time monitoring, grievance redressal, and performance evaluation.
  • Encouraging use of digital payment systems, UPI, QR codes etc., for both inward and outward cooperative transactions.
  • Promoting capacity building for cooperative staff and members in digital literacy, accounting, internal audit, and financial controls.

Good governance and transparency build trust among members, reduce leakages, and increase efficiency, which are central to cooperative sustainability.

 

  1. Inclusive Growth: Women, Youth, Marginalised Groups

 

The National Policy emphasises integrating women, youth, tribal communities, and other marginalised groups in cooperative structures. State policies should:

  • Set aside quotas or special incentives for leadership positions in cooperatives (Boards, management) for women and youth.
  • Provide targeted training, mentorship, and financial support to cooperatives led by marginalised communities, or operating in remote/tribal areas.
  • Ensure cooperative services address the needs of these groups — e.g., affordable health, nutrition, educational services, or schemes that link cooperatives to government welfare benefits.

This makes the cooperative movement more equitable and socially rooted.

 

  1. Sectoral Diversification & Value Chain Integration

 

Beyond agriculture and credit, the National Policy encourages cooperatives to enter sectors like green energy, insurance, tourism, logistics, retail, and allied services. State policies should prioritise:

  • Identifying regional strengths (for example, fishery or dairy in coastal states; horticulture, floriculture, or spices elsewhere) and supporting cooperatives to build value chains (processing, branding, export).
  • Facilitating partnerships/market linkages, including with exporter organisations, private sector, or cooperative federations to access markets.
  • Providing incentives for cooperatives to take up non-traditional services (health, education, renewable energy installations) as multipurpose community service centres.

Diversification reduces dependency on a single income stream and increases cooperative resilience.

 

  1. Institutional Mechanisms, Legal Framework & State-Centre Coordination

 

To ensure State Cooperative Policies are effective, States must establish or strengthen institutional frameworks:

  • Enact state-level legislation or policy act/notification aligning with the National Cooperative Policy mandates (e.g., establishing model cooperative villages per tehsil, performance benchmarking, etc.).
  • Ensure Registrars of Cooperative Societies (RCS) are empowered, well-resourced, and incentivised to enforce rules, monitor performance, and act decisively on non-compliance.
  • Establish State-level monitoring committees, with periodic reviews, data reporting to national level bodies, and feedback loops for continuous improvement.
  • Ensure financial and technical assistance mechanisms (state grants, matching funds, capacity building, infrastructure support) are built into policy to support cooperative growth.

 

  1. Financial & Fiscal Incentives

 

Appropriate incentives encourage uptake and strengthen cooperatives. State policy priorities should include:

  • Tax reliefs or concessions, subsidies, and cost sharing for infrastructure (godowns, warehouses, cold chain etc.).
  • Assistance for upfront costs of digital infrastructure, computerization, software, training.
  • Preferential procurement policies at state level for cooperatives (e.g., for supplies, government contracts).
  • Access to credit at favourable terms (through state cooperative banks, special funds) especially for start-up cooperatives and underserved areas.

 

Conclusion

A State Cooperative Policy that embodies these priority elements—village-level PACS expansion, digital transformation, inclusive leadership, sectoral diversification, strong legal and institutional frameworks, and appropriate financial incentives—will not only align with the National Cooperative Policy 2025 but also ensure that cooperatives are robust, responsive, and deeply anchored in local communities. By doing so, States can catalyse cooperative institutions to be engines of rural prosperity, local employment, equitable growth, and sustainable development.

States that align well will be able to bridge national vision and grassroots realities, ensuring that the cooperative movement in their jurisdictions becomes not just a statutory sector, but a lived reality enriching millions.

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