Abstract:
By the mid-1970s, Tanzania had the biggest co-operative movement in Africa and the oldest in East Africa.
Despite such achievement for decades, the literature on Tanzania's small-scale coffee and cotton cultivation and
marketing co-operatives has suffered from a dearth of substantive historical accounts. The available literature is
fragmented along various academic disciplines, mostly political science and sociology. In addition, there is no
single substantive secondary historical study specifically dedicated to the co-operative movement since the
inception in 1932. The neglect is more critical given the current renaissance in Africa and increasing international
interest in the co-operative movement at either national or local levels. This thesis seeks to fill this gap by utilising
primary sources from the Co-operative College archive in Manchester and Tanzania National Archive (TNA) to
examine and evaluate the coffee and cotton marketing co-operatives during the 1932 to 1982 period. The study
further explores the interlocking forces and policies that led to its growth and development. The development is
also examined against the changing political and ideological influences during the interwar, and post-war to
independence periods. This thesis is structured under three cases, two of which are coffee marketing cooperatives,
the Kilimanjaro Native Co-operative Union (KNCU) and Bukoba Cooperative Union (BCU) in Kagera; and the
cotton apex marketing co-operative in the WCGA, the Victoria Federation of Co-operative Unions (VFCUS)
which was formed in 1955. Study findings show that the time gap in the formation of the mentioned cooperatives
were due to the colonial authority neglecting its own co-operative development policy. The evidence shows that,
the KNCU which was formed in 1933 and BCU in 1950 were both established at the behest of the British colonial
government in a move to control the coffee industry. Importantly, the study examines the power relations involved
and the government interventions in the process and the extent to which the co-operatives were promoted and
controlled by the government through the co-operative and agricultural marketing policies and legislations. This
was particularly provided under Section 36 Of the 1932 co-operative legislation and was further reinforced by
three policies, the 1934 Chagga Rule, the 1937 Native (control and marketing) Ordinance and the Defence
Ordinance, Orders of 1939 and 1940; and the African Agricultural Products (Control and Marketing) Ordinance,
1949. The post-colonial authority perpetuated the colonial policies in promoting cooperatives and the control of
agricultural export revenues provided under the 1962 by the National Agricultural Products Board (Control and
Marketing) Act by intensifying the intervention, effectively strangling and restructuring them to provide for
effective control. Again, there was an increased politisation of the movement's function as they became an integral
part of the propagation of the socialist/ujamaa ideology and the national development plan as the 1976
villagisation policy. This study is of the view that the colonial and post-colonial authorities intervened in the
formation of co-operatives given the fact that they were economic strategically vital. During the phases covered
in this thesis, the established legislations reinforced the government's control over the co-operative movement
and the producers; and granted themselves a monopoly over the handling and export of small-scale produced
coffee and cotton through the control of marketing boards by appointing co-operatives as crop handling agents.
Thus, the co-operative movement never attained autonomous status as it became part of the government
machinery in extracting resources and exploiting small-scale growers.