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"We should launch our own large scale cooperatives owned by employees and consumers that can compete with Wal-Mart on cost and variety of goods, and build the local community rather than destroy it... This has been done in Spain, in Italy, in Canada. It can be done here."--Dan Swinney, CLCR
Dan Swinney has been called a dangerous man. I say, "Lord, let him be bad as he wanna be!"
Dan Swinney is in Emiligia Romagna, or will be soon, and when he's back he'll be posting insights and impressions about the evolution of economic democracy in northern Italy.
Co-Mart? Not a bad idea. Is it just an idea or are some people really thinking about it?
Par Pierre Ducasse le 2005-06-26 11:05I am sure that it would work here in Quebec if labor and the caisse populaire got behind it. Also I would be interested in reading that rteport on Emilia Romagna.
Par Larry Gambone le 2005-06-28 00:40Swinney is back in the states as of Monday 27th June 2005.
He mentioned "Co-Mart" to me in passing when I visited him at his office in Chicago. Since then what I have seen on the net is touch-and-go, and so I don't yet know who the prime movers are behind this initiative as yet. I would suggest that perhaps Pierre invite Dan Swinney onto the blog to give us more details. Personally, with my interest in both FMNS and supply chain management, I'm chomping on the bit to do what I can to assist such an initiative.
Par Alan Avans le 2005-06-29 07:09
New Impressions of Emilia Romagna--a Global Leader in Innovative Approaches to Development and Economic Democracy
In the 1940s, the Emilia Romagna region in northern Italy—Bologna is its center—was one of the poorest regions in Europe. Today, according to Bob Williams, of the Van City Capital Corporation in Vancouver:
“There are 90,000 manufacturing enterprises in the region, surely one of the highest densities per capita in the world! Small, medium, enterprises (SME’s) predominate. One person in twelve is self-employed or owns a small business. In recent years the region has produced the highest GDP per capita in the country, and it now ranks with the ten best in Europe…2/3 of the citizens of Bologna belong to a co-op…45% of the GDP is produced by co-ops…(and) 85% of the social services in Bologna are delivered by co-ops…”
Today it’s a fascinating web of cooperatives, small manufacturing companies, innovative social service programs, and a complex and dynamic partnership between business, labor, and government. It’s a region that was governed by the Italian Communist Party for over thirty years, and still has strong labor, social and business organizations and leaders that identify with the left, as well as a strong Catholic tradition among those sectors, and a smaller presence of similar companies, organizations, and networks that identify with the right.
I with 16 other American and Canadian cooperative practitioners just spent 5 intense days in Emilia Romagna studying this phenomena with the support of the Cooperative Charitable Trust Forum of Cambridge, Massachusetts. I was looking at this region to understand it relevance and importance for those who are looking for a model for development that is practical, has scale, and consistent with social justice values. This was my second visit and study tour. After the first, I had more questions than I started with, and was skeptical. This time, I got it. This region needs to go to the top of the list for those in the developed and developing world creating the competitive alternative development model.
Some of Emilia Romagna’s manufacturing companies that are world class high performance companies are cooperatives. Other private companies and cooperatives work together in flexible networks that combine a number of smaller firms into joint projects. And government has played a powerfully positive role in creating sector-based service centers that assist smaller companies in being competitive in the global economy;
Coop Italia is the top retailer surpassing giants like the French equivalent of Wal-Mart—Carrefour—in sales. It has 6 million owner/members, 55,000 employees, 1,200 stores, and €11 Billion in sales;
Cooperatives are legally required to put profits into an “indivisible fund” that will sustain the company for generations and can’t be taken by the worker owners;
The cooperatives have their own huge insurance company—Unipol, large investment funds such as Coop Fund to provide loan and equity to start-up companies, and very sophisticated support organizations such as Lega Coop that provide a full-range of technical, educational, and financial services to insure the success of cooperatives;
“Social Cooperatives” provide various services to the mentally and physically disabled—“privatizing” what historically were state services but to cooperatives that are frequently preferred by professionals because they permit creativity and the delivery of high quality services and work experience for the disabled; and
Italian cooperatives are expanding internationally, and the cooperative movement is assisting the growth of cooperatives in both the developing as well as the developed world. Recently the Coop Fund and a large cooperative of restaurants committed $500,000 in debt and equity, as well as technical assistance to a group of workers in New York City affiliated with the labor-based Restaurant Occupation Center who are starting a restaurant cooperative in Manhattan.
Those committed to economic democracy and sustainable development need to learn more about this experience. See Coop Italia power point, Bob William’s full article, and a great description by David Thompson on the region at www.clcr.org
Par Dan Swinney le 2005-07-05 13:57How do we deal with Wal-Mart? Read CLCR's approach by going to our home page--www.clcr.org and hit the link for "A Campaign to Build the High Road Retail Sector in Chicago". This is still just a concept, but there is genuine interest locally and internationally--it's just waiting to be done. Our challenge is raising the funding for the development stage to do the business plan and to work thru the details.... This could be accomplished with support from local, provincial, or state government; a major union; a foundation; a network of retail or other companies that recognize that wal-mart will be eating them for lunch one way or the other.....
We are interested in your ideas, questions, suggestions...it's a matter of time.
Par Dan Swinney le 2005-07-05 14:02