Co-operative Societies
Constitutional Background
Prior to 2011, co-operative societies enjoyed no special constitutional protection despite their significant role in the Indian economy. The 97th Constitutional Amendment Act of 2011 brought a structural change by:
- Making the right to form co-operative societies a Fundamental Right under Article 19(1)(c).
- Inserting Article 43-B as a new Directive Principle of State Policy, directing the State to promote voluntary formation, autonomous functioning, democratic control, and professional management of co-operatives.
- Adding Part IX-B to the Constitution (Articles 243-ZH to 243-ZT) with detailed provisions on the governance of co-operative societies.
Note: "Co-operative societies" is a subject under Entry 32 of the State List (Seventh Schedule), meaning state legislatures have primary legislative authority over them.
Key Constitutional Provisions (Part IX-B)
Incorporation
State legislatures may enact laws for the incorporation, regulation, and winding-up of co-operative societies based on the principles of:
- Voluntary formation
- Democratic member-control
- Member-economic participation
- Autonomous functioning
Board Composition
- Maximum number of directors: 21
- One seat reserved for SC/ST members (if such members exist in the society)
- Two seats reserved for women on every board
- Up to 2 co-opted members with expertise in banking, management, finance, or related fields may be added — they have no voting rights and cannot become office bearers
- Functional directors are board members but are not counted in the 21-director ceiling
Term of Office
- Elected board members and office bearers serve a five-year term from the date of election
Elections
- Elections must be held before the expiry of the current board's term so new members take office immediately
- Superintendence, direction, and control of elections vest in a body designated by the state legislature
Supersession and Suspension of Board
A board may be superseded or kept under suspension for grounds including:
- Persistent default
- Negligence in duties
- Acts prejudicial to the society or its members
- Constitutional stalemate in the board
- Failure of the election body to conduct elections
Key limits:
- Suspension/supersession cannot exceed 6 months (1 year for co-operative banks other than multi-state co-operative banks)
- No supersession is permissible where there is no government shareholding, loan, financial assistance, or guarantee
- On supersession, an administrator manages affairs and must arrange elections within 6 months
Audit
- Accounts must be audited at least once per financial year
- Auditor/auditing firm appointed by the general body from a panel approved by the State Government
- Audit must be completed within 6 months of the close of the financial year
- Audit report of an apex co-operative society must be laid before the state legislature
General Body Meetings
- Annual general body meetings must be convened within 6 months of the close of the financial year
Member Rights
- Members have the right to access books, information, and accounts
- State legislature may provide for member participation in management and for co-operative education and training
Returns
Every co-operative society must file returns within 6 months of the close of the financial year to a designated state authority, including:
- Annual activity report
- Audited accounts
- Surplus disposal plan
- List of by-law amendments
- Declaration on general body meetings and elections
Offences and Penalties
State legislature may define offences, which must include:
- Filing false returns or furnishing false information
- Wilful disobedience of summons/orders
- Employer's failure to remit deductions to the society within 14 days
- Failure to hand over custody of books/property to authorised persons
- Corrupt practices before, during, or after board elections
Multi-State Co-operative Societies
- All Part IX-B provisions apply, but references to "State Legislature", "State Act", and "State Government" are read as "Parliament", "Central Act", and "Central Government" respectively
Union Territories
- Part IX-B applies to UTs; the President may exempt any UT by notification
Continuance of Existing Laws
- Inconsistent state laws continue for 1 year from the commencement of the 97th Amendment (i.e., from 15 February 2012) or until amended/repealed, whichever is earlier
Reasons for the 97th Amendment
- Governance failures: Elections were postponed indefinitely; nominated administrators ran co-operatives for prolonged periods, reducing democratic accountability.
- Qualitative underperformance: Despite quantitative growth, co-operatives failed to deliver quality services; poor professionalism was a persistent issue.
- Need for autonomy: The amendment sought to insulate co-operatives from unnecessary external (often political) interference and to ensure democratic, professional management.
Articles at a Glance
| Article | Subject |
|---|---|
| 243-ZH | Definitions |
| 243-ZI | Incorporation |
| 243-ZJ | Board composition and term |
| 243-ZK | Election of board members |
| 243-ZL | Supersession and suspension |
| 243-ZM | Audit of accounts |
| 243-ZN | General body meetings |
| 243-ZO | Member right to information |
| 243-ZP | Returns |
| 243-ZQ | Offences and penalties |
| 243-ZR | Multi-state co-operative societies |
| 243-ZS | Union territories |
| 243-ZT |
Exam Focus
- The 97th Amendment is a frequent UPSC anchor — know the three constitutional changes it made.
- The 21-director cap, 2 co-opted members (no voting rights), and the 6-month supersession limit are common trap questions.
- Know the distinction: co-operatives with no government involvement cannot be superseded.
- Article 43-B (DPSP) vs Article 19(1)(c) (Fundamental Right) — both were added by the same amendment.
- Entry 32, State List governs co-operative societies legislatively.
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