The Ukrainian cooperative movement addressed the economic plight of the Ukrainian people through the creation of financial, agricultural and trade cooperatives that enabled Ukrainians to pool their resources, obtain less expensive loans and insurance, and to pay less for products such as farm equipment. The cooperatives played a major role in the social and economic mobilization of the Ukrainian people, most of whom were peasants. First begun in the 1860s, after 1917 the development of cooperatives was stunted by Soviet policies, but continued in Polish-ruled Western Ukraine, where by 1939 cooperatives had 700,000 members, employing 15,000 Ukrainians. The cooperatives were shut down by the Soviet authorities when western Ukraine was annexed by the Soviet Union in 1939. However, they continued to exist and flourish among Ukrainian emigrants and their descendants in the Ukrainian diaspora in North and South America, Europe and Australia.
History
Under Russian rule
The beginnings of cooperative movement in Ukrainian lands ruled by the Russian Empire belong to the 1860s. The first consumer cooperative was formed in Kharkiv in 1866 at the initiative M. Ballin. In 1869-1871 credit unions were established in Hadiach and Sokyryntsi, both in Poltava Governorate, by Hryhoriy Galagan. However, until the 1890s the development of cooperative movement under Russian rule was slow due to lack of popular initiative, deficient law and hurdles presented by authorities. During that period many cooperatives were supported by zemstvo organs. The cooperative movement became more active after the adoption of a special law in 1897, which allowed the approval of cooperatives' statutes by local governors, not by the central government as it used to be before, as well as the 1895 law on small-scale credit.[1]
After 1905, Ukrainian governorates of Poltava, Kyiv and Podolia took leading positions in the whole Russian Empire in respect to the number of cooperative societies existing in their territories. First cooperative unions in Ukraine emerged in 1901 in Berdiansk, in 1908 in Kyiv and in 1910 in Vinnytsia. However, in 1913 those unions were dissolved, and replaced with the "South Russian Consumer Society" in
In modern Ukraine
In modern Ukraine cooperation among agricultural producers suffers due to the lack of information among the general population, which tends to mistake cooperatives for collective farms, as well as excessive bureaucracy. According to the director of Lviv Agricultural Counselling Service, among 543 villages in Lviv region, which used to be the centre of Ukrainian cooperative movement before WW2, only in 27 locals were enthusiastic about creating cooperatives. One notable exception to this trend is Zabolottsi rural hromada, whose inhabitants established a milk production cooperative with the aid of local authorities and Canadian donors.[11]
See also
- Agricultural cooperative
- Cooperative
- Ukrainian National Democratic Alliance
- Khrystofor Baranovsky