CO-OPERATIVE CREDIT
Outline:
1.
The meaning of credit.
2.
The meaning of co-operation.
3.
The principle and object of a
co-operative credit society.
4.
What Pakistani Co-operative Credit
Societies are doing.
What is co-operative credit? Well
let us first look at the meaning of these two words. What is “credit”? It
means, literally, trust or belief; as one I say, “I do not give any credit to
that rumor,” meaning, I do not believe. It means that same thing in business.
To sell “on credit” means to sell on trust-that is, not for immediate payment
will be made in the future. In a business sense, a man is said to “have credit”
when he can be trusted to be able and willing to pay what he owes at the proper
time. If you want a loan from a bank, you will not get it unless you “have
credit”. The bank must be sure that you can and will repay the loan when the
time due comes. Even then a bank will want some kind of security as well in the
shape, either of property, or of the promise of another man that he will repay
the loan if you do not.
Now a poor farmer has not as a
rule, enough “credit” to get a loan from an ordinary bank. He may be an honest
man; but he has not enough property to give the security the bank demand. The
bank may know he is willing to repay the loan, but it is not sure that he will be
able to pay. Here is where co-operation comes in. When ten men reap a field
together they are “co-operating”. So a “co-operative credit society” is a
mutual help society, the members of which join together to help one another.
The way they help one another is a
co-operative credit society is by joining their single individual credits
together, so that the united credit of the whole society may be sufficient to
make it worthwhile for a bank to advance loans to the society. A bank will not
do business with a single poor farmer; but it will do business with a united
body of poor farmers. This is the principle of the co-operative credit
societies which are doing so much in Pakistani to relieve Pakistan farmers from
debt, and to supply them with capital to work their farm.
The Government passed the
Co-operative Credit Societies Act 1904. Since then, village banks or
co-operative credit societies have been established all over sub-continent.
Immense good has been done. The burden of agricultural indebtedness has been
lifted. Old debts to money-lenders have been paid off, and much land redeemed
from mortgage. And, most off and much land redeemed from mortgage. And, most
important of all, the people have been learning habits of thrift, punctuality,
mutual self-help and hopeful industry.
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