THE IMPORTANCE OF IMPROVING AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION THROUGH CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETIES.
(A CASE STUDY OF ANIOCHA L.G.A, ANAMBRA STATE.)
ABSTRACT
Agriculture is a science or practice of cultivating the land the keeping or breeding animal for food and for the promotion of the countries economy.
The importance of improving Agricultural production through Co-operative Society especially in Anambra State, is their source of earning food and money for their survival, both man and animal around. It is also provision of raw materials for the Agro-based Industries, which helps in the production facilities programmes.
Co-operative society is the coming together of different people in order to achieve a common goals and objectives of the society. They teamed up in Anambra State to cultivate and supply masses with food and also to feed themselves with their families.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
1.3 PURPOSE /OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
1.4 SCOPE AND LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
1.5 DEFINITION OF TERMS
REFERENCES
CHAPTER TWO
2.0 REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE
2.1 DEFINITION OF AGRICULTURE
2.2 IMPORTANCE OF AGRICULTURE
2.3 AGRICULTURAL CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETIES
2.4 TYPES OF ORGANISATIONAL FORMS OF AGRICUL-
TURAL CO-OPERATIVES AND HOW THEY IMPROVE
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
2.5 SERVICES PROVIDED BY AGRICULTURAL CO-
OPERATIVES
REFERENCES
CHAPTER THREE
3.0 RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODOLOGY
3.1 SOURCES OF DATA COLLECTION
3.2 METHOD OF DATA COLLECTION
3.3 RESEARCH POPULATION
3.4 SAMPLE SIZE
3.5 METHOD OF DATA ANALYSIS
CHAPTER FOUR
4.0 SUMMARY OF FINDINGS, CONCLUSION AND
RECOMMENDATION
4.1 SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
4.2 CONCLUSION
4.3 RECOMMENDATIONS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
APPENDIX
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
In Anambra State, most inhabitants survive through Agriculture and their main occupation is subsistence farming which attracted the interest of many co-operative societies both the old and new ones. Improving the Agricultural production was their main target and at the same time lifting the level of it size and qualities. Most of the crop couldn’t grow well in order to produce as expected. The product that were several affected were yam tubers, cocoa yam, vegetable, cassava stem and tubers.
In the sixties, Anambra State economy had a mono-sectorial dependency on Agriculture as the main source of earning, and also the main source of employment. Then we took one leaf from this dependency on agriculture to a higher dependency on trade and white collar jobs.
Anambra state Agriculture is till completely preasentised, hoe, cutlass economy with a large number of small-scale holder producers. One can observe that Anambra state is still semi-substantial and their output from Agriculture production can neither feed the fearing population nor provide essential raw material for the agro-based industries. The export of the state major cash crops which has in the past supported the economy has virtually stopped.
While a lot of observers dwell on the urgent need to reinitialize this sector, Omuma (1986) implied the adverse effects of no reinitialization of the agricultural sector noted that under such conditions, all it needed was famine and kwashiorkor to be evident in the village.
Furthermore, one wondered why it is taking the state so long despite its abundant land and know-how to revitalize the agricultural sector and save the inhabitants of Anambra state who both underrated kwashiorkor stricken and undernourished. While emphasizing the importance of improving agriculture productions, through co-operatives. Igbo (1996) said, it is now on the government the dependence on the external sources of food, because it has ties their state independence to the uncertainties of ridiculed.
According to Anambra state food journal (1991), Agriculture was the back bone of the state’s economy development to thousands of Anambra state indigenes over 95% of the labour force, mostly from rural areas. Agriculture produces feeds for animals that provide proteins for man.
All these made the government to organize these present farmers into agricultural co-operative with view of having massive food production in the country.
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Co-operative movement all over the world has been considered or taken as both mean and instrument of development whereby individual as group of people with common social-economic come together mutually to take and solve their common socio-economic problems. In our country today, sources of statements have been made in the newspapers and other news media, by scholars advocating the use of co-operative societies for the development and improvement of living standard of the rural people.
Meanwhile, many programmes have been launched by the federal government in support of this rural development, such as Agricultural Development Project (ADP), National Land Development Authority (NALDA), Directorate of Food, Roads and Rural Infrastructures (DFRRI), Better Life {Programme (BLP), etc.
Recently, the family support programme (FSP) which was launched by the federal government which aims at improving the life of the rural dwellers through the formation of co-operative movement. Co-operative movement spans through many aspects of our economic life such as production, consumption, distribution, thrift, savings and the provision of rural infrastructures.
1.1 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
Nigeria has embarked on various programmes and policies, costing hundreds of millions of naira aimed at reviving the depressed agricultural sector.
In view of this, agricultural co-operative was instituted so as to organize the small-scale farmer who are still involve in manual labour type of farming in co-operative and had failed to produce enough food for our teaming population thereby forcing the country to be involved in importation of large quantity of food with a huge percentage decline in agricultural export. All these government efforts have not actually had much significant improvement in this sector as much emphasis is now being placed on agriculture. This call for urgent reexamination of the role of these agricultural products, its aim of facilitating the attainment of self sufficient in agricultural and making agriculture to take its prime position in the national economy of this country.
1.2 PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The general purpose of this project report is to undertake a study of the existing farmer co-operative societies has their efforts in improving the development of agriculture.
Also the study has the following objectives:
a) To examine the organizational structure and the operations of co-operatives movement in Anambra state with particular reference to Aniocha Local Government Area.
b) To examine the impact of the farmer co-operative societies.
c) To investigate the problems facing the farmers co-operative societies.
d) To suggest ways and means for enhancing the effectiveness of the societies and assist in further research into contemporary issue on this manner.
1.3 DEFINITION OF TERMS.
1. Agricultural Productivity:
The index of the ratio of the value of the total farm output to the value of the total
input used in farm production.
2. Farm Management:
The application of farming science and technology , the solution of the day-to-day
problems facing the farmers.
3. Bye-laws:
We mean the registered bye-laws made by a co-operative society which governs the
activities of such society and which is made by a society in the exercise of any power
conferred by the co-operative society law.
4. Small-scale Individual farms:
This implies a farmer whose total cultivatable counterparts the nation of Nigeria, not to talk of the world. If they are organized in co-operative increased productivity enhanced the profit maximized to them, and their farming will once more look attractive.
5. Auxiliary Co-Operatives:
This type provides individual services to number the co-operatives’ main functions which provide credit supply and market and storage. The co-operatives main functions are to provide credits supply, market and storage. The co-operative has no hand in the supervision and management affairs of member farm.
- Productive Co-operatives:
There is a full integration. The co-operative absorbs all the members business
enterprise that is members’ economic responsibilities are borne to be the co-operative which is found in Aniocha local government area.
This is co-operative by integration; the farmer depends on society for his production
activities. There is a strong link between the co-operative and members in areas of
management facing them.