2016
DOI: 10.3920/jcns2016.x001
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Generic solutions to coordination and organizational costs: informing cooperative longevity

Abstract: For years, scholars and policy makers have ar gued that cooperatives, particularly agricultural cooperatives, exhibit organizational inefficiencies primarily caused by individual member behavior that is often independent and non-cooperative conflicting with the formation of effective coalition building. This free riding tendency creates significant challenges for a continued joint collaboration between and among member patrons. Yet, agricultural cooperatives have a long history of surviving as successful busin… Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…Generally, these actions move the organization toward reducing costly consequences of frictions. These solutions usually fit within one of four generic categories of solutions, (a) user alignment; (b) member retention; (c) supply/demand balancing; and (d) transparency solutions [1]. This modification and/or process is called "tinkering".…”
Section: Diachronic Increases In Heterogeneitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Generally, these actions move the organization toward reducing costly consequences of frictions. These solutions usually fit within one of four generic categories of solutions, (a) user alignment; (b) member retention; (c) supply/demand balancing; and (d) transparency solutions [1]. This modification and/or process is called "tinkering".…”
Section: Diachronic Increases In Heterogeneitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In every session, the LCF concept was evaluated and modified with the insights and suggestions from more than 5000 participants. Concepts such as multiple life cycles, tinkering, member heterogeneity, subgroup frictions, simmering factions, cooperative genius, and specific solutions emerged from these interactive exchanges [1]. Over time, participants stressed the importance of having an outline or framework to guide the study of their own cooperative's evolution and history of dealing with the complexity of investment and control constraints unique to the cooperative organizational form.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While addressing the intra-cooperative relationships among members, directors, and managers is important (see [17]), farmer cooperatives must also consider the dynamic external environment if survival is the objective. Dual consideration of internal and external adaptation corresponds to the notion of co-evolution [18,19].…”
Section: External Adaptation By Farmer Cooperativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While dozens of farmer cooperatives exit each year by means of mergers, acquisitions, liquidations, and bankruptcies [16], why and how might others survive? Some researchers have informed solutions to internal inefficiencies [17], and there exist scattered…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%