Chapter 4 - The Organisation of Agribusiness
Chapter 4 - The Organisation of Agribusiness
Chapter 4 - The Organisation of Agribusiness
The Organization of an
Agribusiness
An agribusiness firm be a firm with billions
of dollars sales that employs thousands of
people
It may be as small as an individual who is a
part time seed corn sales person
One person or one family agribusiness is
not uncommon
Most of the agribusiness enterprises
employ hundreds and thousands of people
Forms of Business Organizations
Every agribusiness is owned by someone
The circumstances of ownership give an
organization its specific legal form.
Five basic business forms:
1. Sole Proprietorship
2. Partnership
3. Corporation
4. Limited Liability Company (LLC)
5. Cooperative
Every conceivable size and kind of agribusiness
may have any of these five forms
In addition, strategic alliances of various types
can also be used
Factors Influencing Choice of Business Form
1. What type of business is it, where will it be conducted, and what
are owners’ objectives and philosophies for the agribusiness?
2. How much capital is available for the firm’s start-up?
3. How much capital is needed to support the agribusiness?
4. How easy is it secure additional capital for the agribusiness?
5. What tax liabilities will be incurred and what tax options are
available?
6. How much personal involvement in the management and control
of the agribusiness do the owners desire?
7. How important are the factors of stability, continuity, and transfer
of ownership to the firm’s owners?
8. How desirable is it to keep the affairs of the agribusiness private
and carefully guard any public disclosure?
9. How much risk and liability are the owners willing to assume?
10. How much will this form for organization cost and how easy is this
form of agribusiness to organize?
The Sole Proprietorship
The oldest and simplest form
An organization owned and controlled by one person or family
Tend to be small businesses
Popular and widely available
Advantages
Minimal legal requirements (Only requirement is individual’s
desire to start business and sometimes the purchase of license)
Complete control over the business (plans, programs, policies)
unless delegated by the owner
All profits and losses, all liability to creditors and liability from
other business activities are vested in the proprietor.
Cost of organizing and dissolution are low
The business affairs are completely secret (except sharing with
govt. departments)
Needed capital is supplied by the owner from personal funds or
is borrowed against either the owners’ business or personal
assets.
Personal and business assets are not strictly separated
If an individual is financial sound, lender will be more likely to
extent credit.
Proprietor can sell their business to whomever they wish,
whenever they wish and for whatever price they are willing to
accept
They can take risk on as much risk or liability as they wish
They are personally liable for whatever risk they assume
No income tax as separate entity
The amount left over is treated as personal income or salary
Proprietor may keep or use earned income in the business
Nominal Partner
In name only
Not active in the business and have no investment
The Corporation
A special legal entity endowed by the law with the powers, rights,
liabilities and duties of a person
Sometimes referred to as an “artificial person”
Typically facilitates the accumulation of greater amount of capital
Often are large businesses employing hundreds of thousands of
people and worth billions of Rupees.
Although formed for profit-making, may be formed as nonprofit
corporations such as religious, government, labor and charitable
organizations.
A corporation can own property, incur debts and can sue and be
sued for damages.
The owners (stockholders) and managers do not own anything
directly. Rather corporation itself owns the assets of the
corporation
Forming a Corporation
Requires strict adherence to the laws
One or more persons may join together to create a corporation
Requires legal documentation
When all legal formalities are met and proper fee for
incorporation is paid, a charter authorizing the applicants to do
business as corporation is issued
A corporation need to maintain:
Articles of incorporation: filed with the state and which set forth the
basic purpose of corporation and the means of financing it
Bylaws: Specify such rules of operation as election of directors, duties of
officers and directors, voting procedure and dissolution procedures
Stock certificates or shares: Detailing amounts of the owners’
investment
Stock of the Corporation
When corporations are formed shares of stock are sold to those
who are interested in the enterprise
A share of STOCK: a piece of paper in prescribed legal form which
represents each person’s amount of ownership in the corporation
Common Stock: carries the privilege of voting for the board of
directors that oversees the activities of the corporation
Stockholders are willing to take risk and believe the value of their stock
will increase overtime
Each holder has one vote per share of common stock
Preferred Stock: usually nonvoting and has a preferred position in
receiving dividends and in redemption in the case of liquidation
These stockholders tend to take less risk
The prices of preferred fluctuates relatively less
Preferred stockholders often invest for the dividends granted by the
corporation
Cooperatives
Owned, operated and controlled by members, a cooperative is a
distinct form of the corporate form of business.
Help members improve the prices they receive for the products
they produce
Reduce the prices paid for the inputs necessary to grow those
products.
Help members find markets, and/or improve the negotiating
position of members.
Provide economic and/or operational benefits to member-owners,
and then return the profit to the member-owners based on each
member’s use of the cooperative.
The user-member is the total emphasis for the cooperative. In
contrast, generating profit for the owners of the firm is the purpose
of the non-cooperative business enterprise.
Characteristics of food & agricultural cooperatives
Resemblances with other businesses
They must follow sound business practices and may perform
similar functions.
Have facilities to maintain, employees to hire, advertising to
develop, and so forth.
There are bylaws, policies, and activities that must be performed to
carry out the business at hand.
Cooperatives must generate a return (member benefits plus direct
financial returns) on the investment of their members, which
justifies continued membership in the cooperative.
Differences
Member owned, member controlled
Operation at cost
Limited returns on capital
Member owned, member controlled
They must be owned and control-led by the people who conduct
business with them.
maintain their orientation toward servicing those who patronize
them.
active patron-members—who are also owners of the business—
control the cooperative.
one vote for each active patron-member regardless of how much
business that member transacts with the cooperative or how much
stock the individual member may have accumulated.
Democratic control has gained almost universal acceptance as a
basic cooperative principle.
Member control of cooperatives is executed through a board of
directors, which is selected in open elections from the ranks of
active members.
The board takes on the responsibilities of sensing and representing
the best interests of all members, setting overall policy, hiring and
directing top management, and monitoring the cooperative’s
performance in achieving its objectives.
However, some highly critical decisions involving such issues as
mergers or large investments may be taken directly to the
membership for a vote.
This contrasts with a non-cooperative business, where the owners,
whose number of votes is determined individually by the amount
of stock they own, elect the directors. Consequently, most board
members are stockholders with relatively large ownership interests
Operation at cost
a cooperative’s net income is distributed to individual members in
proportion to the volume of business that they have done with the
cooperative.
A cooperative may choose to retain profits rather than pay them out
as patronage returns, but when it does, it normally must pay
corporate income tax just as any corporation must pay.
The obligation to return profits to members is a primary factor that
separates cooperatives from other forms of business.
Cooperatives may do some business with individuals who are not
members. In the case of such non-patron business, any excess of
income over and above the expenses generated specifically by that
transaction does not have to be returned to the customer.
Instead, many cooperatives elect to treat this additional income as
regular profit, to pay taxes on it just as any business would, and to
use the profits to fund growth of the cooperative.
Limited returns on capital
The basic purpose of cooperatives is to operate at cost in order to
benefit member-patrons directly in their own business
Many state cooperative laws require that returns on invested capital
be limited.
Limiting returns on member equity to a nominal amount helps to
ensure that members holding stock in the cooperative are not
tempted to view the cooperative as an investment in and of itself,
but rather as a service to their own business.
In practice, most cooperatives pay no dividends on their stock;
therefore limiting returns is often a moot point.
Advantages of agricultural cooperatives
Allow agricultural producers to “level the playing field” when they
deal with suppliers of inputs, or with those who purchase their farm
products.
A cooperative can also provide a needed market where none
existed before —again to provide input supplies or to process and
market products produced by farmers.
Disadvantages of agricultural cooperatives
Some cooperatives have gotten so large that the farmer member is
far removed from having any significant voice in the business.
Board of directors is sometimes elected on the basis of popularity
rather than genuine ability to make policy decisions
One vote one member requirement - Some feel that those with
larger business volume and/or the number of shares of stock should
have more say in the operation of the cooperative.