Co-optex Has 65,000 Weavers and Zero Venture Capital — Tamil Nadu’s Cooperative That Silicon Valley Can’t Explain

Co-optex Has 65,000 Weavers and Zero Venture Capital — Tamil Nadu's Cooperative That Silicon Valley Can't Explain

In a small cement-floored shed in Kanchipuram district, a woman named Lakshmi operates a pit loom that is older than most startups’ founding documents. She earns approximately ₹9,000 a month weaving silk sarees — each one taking four to twelve days — and she has never heard the phrase “series A funding.” Yet the organisation that buys her fabric, markets it across India, and deposits money into her bank account operates at a scale that would make many venture-backed D2C brands envious. I find that irony impossible to ignore.

That organisation is Co-optex — formally known as the Tamil Nadu Handloom Weavers’ Co-operative Society — and it connects roughly 65,000 weavers across the state to consumers through a network of showrooms, exhibitions, and increasingly, digital channels. It has no equity investors, no cap table, and no Silicon Valley pitch deck. It runs on membership fees, government support, and the sheer stubbornness of a model that was born in 1935.

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Maharashtra’s Sugar Cooperatives Don’t Just Make Sugar — They Make Chief Ministers

Maharashtra's Sugar Cooperatives Don't Just Make Sugar — They Make Chief Ministers

In Sangli district’s dusty town of Walwa, a single sugar factory controls more than sweetness — it controls who gets elected to the state assembly, who gets a bank loan, and whose son gets a government job. I have spent years tracking India‘s cooperative movement, and nowhere is the entanglement between cooperative economics and raw political power more visible than in Maharashtra’s western sugar belt.

This is not a story about agriculture alone. This is the story of how a network of roughly 200 cooperative sugar factories across Maharashtra became the most effective political machine in Indian democracy — one that has produced at least seven chief ministers, dozens of cabinet ministers, and an entire class of rural oligarchs who straddle the worlds of farming, industry, and governance simultaneously.

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How GST Quietly Rewrote the Rules for Every Cooperative Society in India

How GST Quietly Rewrote the Rules for Every Cooperative Society in India

In January 2019, the secretary of a housing cooperative society in Pune’s Kothrud neighbourhood opened a tax demand notice for ₹3.8 lakh. Her society had collected monthly maintenance from 84 flat-owners for years — money that everyone understood moved from residents to the collective and straight back out as building services. Nobody had imagined it as a “supply of services.” Nobody had thought they needed a GST registration number. That envelope was the moment I first understood how completely the new tax architecture had unsettled India‘s cooperative sector.

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How Kerala’s Kudumbashree Cooperative Network Became the Largest Women-Run Cooperative in Asia

How Kerala's Kudumbashree Cooperative Network Became the Largest Women-Run Cooperative in Asia

In a small rented room in Alappuzha district, a woman named Sreelatha once counted ₹47 in weekly savings collected from nine neighbours. That was 2001. Today, that same neighbourhood group manages a catering micro-enterprise turning over ₹12 lakh annually. I find her story remarkable not because it is unique — but because it has been replicated approximately 3.06 lakh times across every single ward in Kerala. This is the quiet, staggering mathematics of what cooperative mobilisation can achieve when women hold the ledger.

I have spent years covering India‘s cooperative sector for IICTF, and no model has fascinated me more than Kudumbashree — a name that translates to “prosperity of the family” in Malayalam. With over 4.5 million women members as of 2026, it is not merely Kerala’s pride; it is the single largest women-run cooperative network anywhere in Asia. Yet most Indians outside Kerala have only a vague sense of what it actually does or how it works. That gap deserves closing.

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Nobody Told Cooperative Society Members This About the 97th Constitutional Amendment

Nobody Told Cooperative Society Members This About the 97th Constitutional Amendment

The 97th Constitutional Amendment was passed by Parliament in December 2011 with almost no public debate. Most of the 8.5 lakh cooperative societies operating across India — and their roughly 290 million members — had no idea that Parliament had just rewritten the constitutional rules governing their daily financial lives, or that a decade later, … Read more

KMF — Karnataka’s Milk Cooperative Federation That Quietly Became Amul’s Biggest Rival

KMF — Karnataka's Milk Cooperative Federation That Quietly Became Amul's Biggest Rival

In Mandya district, roughly 120 kilometres southwest of Bengaluru, a 54-year-old farmer named Rangaswamy pours approximately 18 litres of milk every morning into a stainless steel can at his village collection centre. He has done this for over two decades. The board above the centre reads “Mandya District Co-operative Milk Producers’ Societies Union” — one of 14 district unions feeding into a machine most Indians outside Karnataka barely know about. That machine is the Karnataka Milk Federation (KMF), and its flagship brand, Nandini, outsells every dairy brand inside the state — including Amul. Rangaswamy earns roughly ₹32 per litre at the procurement point, a figure that has climbed steadily over the past five years. For him, KMF is not a corporate entity. It is the reason his two daughters went to college.

I have tracked India’s cooperative dairy sector for over a decade, and KMF’s story remains one of the most underreported success narratives in the country. While Amul commands national headlines and advertising budgets, KMF has quietly assembled a turnover exceeding ₹22,000 crore, making it India’s second-largest dairy cooperative. What makes this even more remarkable is that KMF operates almost entirely within one state.

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Agricultural Cooperatives in India: Full List by State

Agricultural Cooperatives in India: Full List by State

India is home to one of the largest cooperative movements on the planet, with over 8.5 lakh registered cooperative societies touching the lives of roughly 290 million members. Among these, agricultural cooperatives form the backbone of rural economic activity, handling everything from credit distribution and input supply to marketing, processing, and storage of farm produce … Read more

Punjab’s MARKFED Is India’s Largest State Cooperative — So Why Have Most Indians Never Heard of It?

Punjab's MARKFED Is India's Largest State Cooperative — So Why Have Most Indians Never Heard of It?

In the winter of 2024, a wheat farmer in Mansa district told a reporter from a Chandigarh daily that he had sold grain to “the government” every rabi season for nineteen years — and had never once heard the word MARKFED. Yet it was MARKFED that issued his payment, MARKFED that ran the mandi procurement centre, and MARKFED that moved approximately ₹25,000 crore worth of grain through Punjab’s cooperative supply chain in a single year. I find this paradox endlessly fascinating: India‘s largest state-level cooperative marketing federation operates at a scale that dwarfs most listed FMCG companies, and yet it occupies almost zero space in public imagination.

This isn’t just a branding failure. It’s a window into how India’s cooperative infrastructure — vast, essential, politically entangled — remains invisible to the very people it serves. And if you care about the future of Indian agriculture, MARKFED’s story demands attention.

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The Untold Story of How Cooperative Societies Rebuilt Post-Flood Kerala

The Untold Story of How Cooperative Societies Rebuilt Post-Flood Kerala

When the floodwaters finally retreated across Kerala in August 2018 — the worst inundation the state had witnessed in 94 years — the damage bill had already crossed ₹31,000 crore, more than 480 people were dead, and over a million had been displaced from fourteen of the state’s fourteen districts. Government helicopters and military boats … Read more

How Cooperative Healthcare Is Making Hospitals Affordable in Rural India

How Cooperative Healthcare Is Making Hospitals Affordable in Rural India

When a seasonal farm worker in Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh needed an appendectomy in 2023, the nearest district government hospital had no surgeon available that week. The private clinic nearby quoted ₹75,000 — roughly five months of his annual income. What saved him was a community-owned health cooperative that performed the same procedure, including post-operative care, for … Read more