United Nations declares 2012 as “International Year of Cooperatives”
It’s Christmas season and New Zealand cooperatives have an additional reason for celebration.
On 18 December, the 64th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York proclaimed 2012 as the International Year of Cooperatives.
The proclamation was included in a resolution entitled “Cooperatives in Social Development” (which can be downloaded HERE).
“The UN has designated International Years since 1959 to draw attention to major issues and to encourage international action to address concerns which have global significance,” said Cooperatives Association chairperson Peter Macdougall.
“International Year of the Cooperative is an opportunity for New Zealanders to learn more about the diverse group of cooperative and mutual businesses that contribute so much to our communities in all the corners of this country.”
“The Cooperatives Association will be working with cooperative leaders here and overseas on a programme of International Year activities during 2012 aimed at highlighting the economic and social contributions of cooperatives.”
“It’s true to say that most New Zealanders are unaware of the impact of cooperatives on this country as a whole, on both rural and urban communities right across New Zealand.”
“The International Year of the Cooperative will give us plenty of opportunities to generate awareness of that contribution, and to encourage people to organise themselves into cooperatives to address their own economic and social needs,” he concluded.
Cooperatives in New Zealand ... and the world
• With an aggregate turnover/revenue of more than $30bn, New Zealand's cooperatives and mutuals are responsible for around 20% of the country’s GDP.
• Some of New Zealand's best known businesses are cooperatives and mutuals, including Fonterra Cooperative Group, Foodstuffs (Pak’n’Save, New World, Four Square), Alliance Group, Silver Fern Farms, Mitre 10, Paper Plus, Ravensdown Fertiliser Cooperative, Ballance Agri-Nutrients, Southern Cross, the Automobile Association and Interflora.
• The world’s 300 largest cooperatives and mutuals, six of which are here in New Zealand, have an aggregate turnover/revenue of US$1.1 trillion, the size of the world’s 10th largest economy.
• According to the International Labour Organisation, cooperatives provide more than 100 million jobs, more than all the world’s multinational corporations combined.




