...
...
Next Story

Haryana to draft State Cooperation Policy

An official spokesperson said a committee will be formed within a week to prepare the draft policy. The framework will take into account the experiences of other states while addressing Haryana’s unique requirements.

Published on: Sep 09, 2025 07:36 AM IST
Advertisement

Haryana is set to draft a State Cooperation Policy to strengthen and modernise the cooperative movement, chief secretary Anurag Rastogi said at a meeting of the State Cooperative Development Committee (SCDC) on Monday.

The state targets 477 multi-purpose and 583 dairy cooperatives by 2028–29. (HT File)
The state targets 477 multi-purpose and 583 dairy cooperatives by 2028–29. (HT File)

The meeting was attended by senior officials from the Union ministry of cooperation.

An official spokesperson said a committee will be formed within a week to prepare the draft policy. The framework will take into account the experiences of other states while addressing Haryana’s unique requirements. It will lay out a roadmap to expand and upgrade cooperative institutions, enabling them to play a stronger role in rural development, housing, credit and allied sectors.

The chief secretary has directed officials to diversify 34 primary agricultural credit societies (PACS) across the state, adopting best practices from successful models of other states.

The cooperation department also announced plans to affiliate the Centre of Cooperative Management, Rohtak, with Tribhuvan Sahkari University, Gujarat, to strengthen cooperative education and capacity-building, enabling better training for members of cooperative institutions.

Registrar Cooperative Societies, Rajesh Jogpal said Haryana has drawn up a plan to expand its cooperative network to every panchayat. By 2028–29, the state aims to establish 477 new Multi-Purpose Cooperative Societies (M-PACS) and 583 new Dairy Cooperative Societies (DCS). Fishery Cooperative Societies (FCS) are also planned to widen cooperative coverage.

 
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe