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Indian Citizen Services. The Cooperative Movement in India

1917

Credit is the simplest form of co-operation and it was necessary to familiarise the people with the principles of coperation through the most simple form when they had lost all ideas of associated action chiefly owing to the failure of early English legislators to understand the economic and social structure of the country resulting in the substituting of a regime of economic individualism for [...] Before describing the origin and development of co-operation in India we would attempt to give here a brief survey of the growth of the co-operative movement in some of the chief countries of the world. [...] The essential features of the Raiffeisen rural bank.— Before describing the essential features of the Raiffeisen system we should have a full grasp of the meaning of personal credit which lies at the basis of the Raiffeisen system. [...] In a society with unlimited liability the members over and above the liability to pay in full the nominal value of the obligatory single share—for only one share may be taken by each member—undertake liability for the engagements of the society to its creditors directly to the extent of the whole of their property ; and this liability is individual and collective. [...] The committee and the board are in the first instance legally responsible to the society to the full extent of their property when losses occur as the result of their not exercising the prudence of ordinary business men" in the affairs of the society ; and finally there is the further safeguard of the audit which must be carried out at least oncwithin every two years.
history
Pages
490
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.142146
Segment Pages Author Actions
Preface
i-xxi Panchanandas Mokherji view
Chapter I. A Brief Survey of the Origin and Development of Co-Operation
1-20 unknown view
Chapter II. Recent Developments of Co-Operation in The West
21-55 unknown view
Chapter III. Rural Indebtedness in India
56-60 unknown view
Chapter IV. Preliminary Experiments
61-66 unknown view
Chapter V. The Co-Operative Credit Societies Act of 1904
67-72 unknown view
Chapter VI. Progress of Co-Operation in India Since 1904: The Passing of the Co-Operative Societies Act 1912
73-78 unknown view
Chapter VII. Agricultural Credit Co-Operative Societies
79-98 unknown view
Chapter VIII. Co-Operative Grain Banks or Dharmagolas
99-113 unknown view
Chapter IX. Obstacles in The Way of Rural Co-Operation in India
114-119 unknown view
Chapter X. Effects of the Rural Credit Co-Operative Movement in India
120-128 unknown view
Chapter XI. Non-Agricultural Credit Co-Operative Societies
129-157 unknown view
Chapter XII. Agricultural Non-Credit Co-Operative Societies
158-229 unknown view
Chapter XIII. Co-Operation and Agriculture
230-235 unknown view
Chapter XIV. Non-Agricultural Non-Credit Co-Operative Societies
236-287 unknown view
Chapter XV. Guaranteeing Unions in Burma
288-297 unknown view
Chapter XVI. Higher Co-Operative Financing Agencies: Central Co-Operative Banks
298-306 unknown view
Chapter XVII.Higher Co-Operative Financing Agencies: Provincial Co-Operative Banks
307-321 unknown view
Chapter XVIII.Non-Co-Operative Agricultural Banks Vs. Co-Operative Credit Institutions
322-337 unknown view
Chapter XIX. Co-Operation and Public Aid
338-347 unknown view
Chapter XX. The Law of Co-Operation in India: The Co-Operative Societies Act: Act No. II of 1912
348-392 unknown view
Chapter XXI.Conclusion
393-453 unknown view
Index
i-viii unknown view
Indian Citizen Series
i-viii unknown view

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