The Cooperative That Employs 80,000 People With No CEO — Mondragón vs IFFCO Explained

The Cooperative That Employs 80,000 People With No CEO — Mondragón vs IFFCO Explained

In the rain-soaked hills of Basque Country, Spain, a factory worker casting engine parts earns no less than one-sixth of what the highest-paid manager takes home — and that manager was elected by the very workers on the shop floor. Meanwhile, in Kalol, Gujarat, a marginal farmer holding two bighas of land collects his subsidised bag of Nano Urea from the local society, blissfully unaware that his purchase traces back to one of the world’s largest fertiliser cooperatives headquartered over a thousand kilometres away in New Delhi. Two cooperatives. Two continents. Two radically different answers to the same question: can ordinary people govern an enterprise worth billions?

I have spent years covering India‘s cooperative sector for IICTF, and no comparison sharpens the ideological fault lines of the movement quite like placing Mondragón Corporation beside IFFCO (Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative Limited). One has no CEO and lets workers vote on salaries. The other has a Managing Director, a government-linked board, and serves over 35,000 member cooperatives across India. Both are wildly successful. Both claim the cooperative identity. Yet their DNA could not be more different.

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Why the World’s Largest Economies Are Quietly Embracing Cooperatives Again

Why the World's Largest Economies Are Quietly Embracing Cooperatives Again

The Mondragon Corporation — a worker-owned industrial empire headquartered in the Basque Country of Spain — generates over €12 billion in annual revenue and employs more than 80,000 people, yet most economics departments spent three decades treating it as a curiosity rather than a model worth replicating. That indifference is ending, and the reasons reveal … Read more

Why Cooperatives Survived Every Economic Crisis While Companies Collapsed

Why Cooperatives Survived Every Economic Crisis While Companies Collapsed

When Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy in September 2008, carrying $619 billion in liabilities, it became the largest corporate collapse in American history and an instant symbol of how catastrophically fragile investor-driven institutions can become. What barely made financial headlines that same week was that Rabobank — a Dutch cooperative bank founded by farmers in … Read more