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Practical Support for
Concerted Action
53. Agrarian reform programmes must pay close attention to the decisive role of
concerted action in the launching and development of the farm units created by
redistribution of land.
These farms are faced with
complex problems, especially as concerns marketing. The fact that large numbers
of people fulfill the necessary conditions to aspire to the allocation of land
means that the vast majority of the units will be too small to allow the
profitable use of certain techniques, for example those that make tilling less
burdensome. Such farms also find it hard to obtain the main inputs needed,
because there is often no local outlet, and when such items are
available, they are very expensive. However, their worst problems are related
to the marketing of their produce. In most cases, sales are controlled by a few
local traders, or are in fact impossible — as is the case with new products,
especially those intended for processing — because there is no on-the-spot
demand.
54. In such a situation,
co-operation is an instrument of solidarity capable of offering effective
solutions. Depending on needs, its various forms — service, purchasing,
processing and marketing co-operatives — allow a fuller use of machinery and an
effective concentration of the demand for inputs and the supply of produce to
the market. This in turn gives rise to small-scale economies and forms of
market power that make the associated farms more competitive and can also open
up new outlets for their produce.
Co-operation represents a
precious instrument to allow both private and co-operative enterprises born of
the reform to change the composition of their own production, and in particular
to produce items for export without harming the local economy.
It is also very necessary for any
agrarian reform to include the promotion and support for the establishment of
local co-operative banks intended to grant loans to low-income families and
women in order to support farming, craft activities and even consumption.
Considerable experience shows that such small-scale banks can be an effective
instrument in strengthening the new enterprises and in the struggle against
poverty.
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