
I recently received a heart touching story from one of my dear friends about the genesis of Syndicate Bank. The bank had merged with Canara Bank in 2020. .
There are three reasons why Syndicate Bank is important in the evolution of India as a wealth generator ; and for working towards the upliftment of the masses.
“Firstly, it was born out of a belief that an innovative person cannot really generate wealth for himself on a sustainable basis unless he works out a way to make his community wealthy as well.
Secondly, it was the only large bank in India to locate its headquarters in a rural area ; In the 1930s Manipal was still a village.
Thirdly, even before CK Prahalad arrived , its promoters knew about how wealth could be found at the bottom–of–the-pyramid.“
Till one day, he had his Eureka moment. He realised that one reason why he was not earning-enough was because the people around him were also not earning-enough. Could he change that?
He began strategizing a social revolution that India had never seen or imagined. Dr Pai convinced the poor women visiting him for the treatment of their kids normally. He motivated women to save for the sake of their kids and to ensure that these kids do not end up like their fathers.
Dr Pai began to accept savings in coins from 0.25 paisa per day. Soon that culminated into a corpus of a few thousand Rupees. The 25 paise deposit scheme came to be known as the Pygmy Deposit scheme.
They laughed: “We cannot afford a glass of milk, and you want us to buy a cow?” But Pai gently told them that he could finance the cows for the women.
And repayment was also painless, he explained: “Just give your child a glass of milk, and I shall purchase the rest of the milk from you and adjust the cost of the cow.” Within a short while, there were so many cows in the village that Pai could not purchase all their milk. He therefore formed a milk cooperative. This must have been amongst the first few Milk cooperatives in India, even before Amul came into existence.
How inspiring !
There are two key takeaways from this story. Firstly a doctor endorsed the need for a glass of milk for the children born in a fishing village. Secondly a cooperative is not needed to provide a glass of milk to a child; rather it is made to take care of the milk which is left after giving a glass-of-milk to a child. Importantly this cooperative was created at a place where no one ever thought of introducing milk as a source of protein as the area was having fish as a primary source of proteins.
It is also seen that a few of the cooperatives who are highly subsidised by the government are trying to penetrate into Metro cities like Mumbai and converting the already red ocean into deep red. I feel that the government must lay clear mandate in front of the cooperatives which have been subsidised for market and product diversification. The purpose to subsidise must be larger than the subsidy.
The cooperatives may also diversify their portfolio in order to develop nutritional and fortified dairy products with differential pricing for both rural and urban areas. They may follow the Grameen-Danone model of Bangladesh. These subsidised cooperatives must understand that by making the low value added product portfolio may not make them sustainable.
Subsidies create more of whatever is subsidized. Llewellyn Rockwell
So it is always good to subsidise a valuable context. Currently the milk subsidies are creating surpluses which are then converted into commodities. The future must be to make value added products out of commodities with the judicious use of subsidies.
India has a very high bandwidth of average milk availability from around 100 to 450 ml in the four regions. The government may develop a master plan to normalise this milk availability; and also ensure that the milk is being converted into nutritional value-added dairy products and consumed by the neglected segment of the society.
The readers may also share their comments and insights on how to evolve a more responsible and impactful milk subsidy paradigm.
Source : A blog by Kuldeep Sharma, Chief editor Dairynews7x7