Nong Joe is one of the 968 small coconut farmer-members of the Alubijid-Laguindingan-Gitagum Integrated Farmers Association (ALGIFA), one of the biggest cooperatives in Mindanao with close to P5 million in assets. A founding member of the cooperative, Nong Joe still recalls with clarity the struggling years when he and his fellow members were mere subsistence farmers who could hardly make ends meet.
On the recommendation of the Philippine Coconut Authority, UCPB agreed to finance the tobacco growing activities of coconut farmers in three municipalities of Misamis Oriental, namely Laguindingan, Gitagum and Alubijid.
The farmers were each initially given a P2,000 loan at socialized rates by the banks subsidiary, UCPB Rural Bank. On top of the credit, the banks social development arm, the UCPB-Coconut Industry Investment Fund Foundation, sent a community worker to lay the groundwork for the eventual organization of the farmers into a cooperative.
"Initially, we werent sold on the idea of putting up a cooperative. We, however, agreed because we had nothing to lose," Nong Joe said.
Over the next two years, the farmers received instructions on the workings of a cooperative from the UCPB-CIIF Foundation. Grudgingly at first, and then with full enthusiasm, they attended leadership and team-building workshops, values formation training and cooperative management seminars. On the side, the UCPB Rural Bank taught them practical skills like bookkeeping and how to conduct project feasibility studies.
Finally, in 1989, the ALGIFA was registered with the Bureau of Agricultural Cooperative Development. It only had an initial asset base of P40,000 but a wide membership of 426 gave the cooperative enough leverage to obtain volume discounts from dealers of farm inputs. Gradually, the cooperative built up enough capital to start trading operation. As it began buying tobacco leaves from its members, it eventually started to influence the buying price of tobacco leaves in the area.
Outsiders say the more telling indicator that the farmer-members of ALGIFA have achieved a measure of self-reliance and prosperity is that they can now access formal credit and pay commercial rates on their loans.
But to the farmer-members themselves, the big difference lies in the comforts that they now enjoy. As one member said: "Before the cooperative was set up, we had a house that was so small the kitchen was outside. Now, weve been able to expand the house and to buy material things like a TV. For some people, these might not be much; to us, these are giant improvements in our standard of living."