Here are the leading factors that encourage membership:
1. Access to Affordable Credit
One of the strongest motivations is access to:
- Low-interest loans
- Production financing
- Emergency cash assistance
- Input credit for seeds, fertilizer, feeds, or fuel
Many farmers face difficulty borrowing from banks due to lack of collateral, making cooperatives an important alternative to informal lenders or “5-6” systems.
2. Better Market Access
Farmers join when cooperatives help them:
- Find stable buyers
- Access institutional markets
- Negotiate better farmgate prices
- Reduce dependence on middlemen
Collective marketing gives small farmers stronger bargaining power.
3. Lower Cost of Farm Inputs
Cooperatives can purchase inputs in bulk, reducing costs for:
- Fertilizers
- Seeds
- Pesticides
- Feeds
- Farm equipment
Lower production costs directly improve farmer income.
4. Access to Government Support Programs
ARBOs often become channels for:
- Farm machinery distribution
- Livelihood grants
- Training programs
- Crop insurance
- Infrastructure support
- DAR assistance
- DA interventions
Membership increases visibility and eligibility for development programs.
5. Farm Machinery and Shared Services
Small farmers may not afford machinery individually, but cooperatives can provide:
- Tractors
- Rice threshers
- Corn shellers
- Hauling vehicles
- Solar dryers
- Processing facilities
Shared assets improve productivity and reduce labor costs.
6. Sense of Collective Security
Membership creates a support network during:
- Crop failures
- Typhoons
- Illness
- Market downturns
Farmers often value the social solidarity and mutual aid aspect of cooperatives.
7. Training and Capacity Building
Farmers are encouraged by opportunities to learn:
- Modern farming techniques
- Financial literacy
- Entrepreneurship
- Climate-resilient agriculture
- Digital marketing
Knowledge access increases confidence and productivity.
8. Dividend and Patronage Refund Potential
Well-performing cooperatives may distribute:
- Dividends
- Patronage refunds
- Profit shares
This creates a sense of ownership and direct economic participation.
9. Success Stories from Fellow Farmers
Nothing motivates farmers more effectively than visible local success:
- Improved houses
- Better farm yields
- Increased income
- Children finishing school
- Successful cooperative enterprises
Peer influence strongly affects cooperative participation.
10. Trustworthy and Transparent Leadership
Farmers are more willing to join when leaders demonstrate:
- Integrity
- Transparency
- Accountability
- Inclusiveness
- Professional management
Trust is often the deciding factor between active participation and hesitation.
11. Land Tenure and Agrarian Reform Support
For ARBs specifically, ARBOs may help with:
- Collective land management
- Support services under agrarian reform
- Legal assistance
- Access to titling and documentation support
This strengthens long-term farm stability.
12. Opportunity for Value-Adding Enterprises
Farmers become interested when cooperatives move beyond raw commodity selling into:
- Food processing
- Packaging
- Branding
- Dairy production
- Coffee roasting
- Bamboo processing
- Agritourism
Value addition increases income potential substantially.
Core Reality
Farmers and ARBs usually join cooperatives when three conditions exist:
- Visible economic benefit
- Trusted leadership
- Consistent delivery of services
When cooperatives function effectively as real business and community institutions — not merely as paper organizations — farmer participation becomes much stronger.
In many successful rural communities, cooperatives evolve from being “assistance channels” into engines of local economic transformation.
