Canada In Canada, cooperative banking is provided by credit unions (
caisses populaires in French). As of September 30, 2012, there were 357 credit unions and
caisses populaires affiliated with Credit Union Central of Canada. They operated 1,761 branches across the country with 5.3 million members and $149.7 billion in assets.
Quebec The
caisse populaire movement started by
Alphonse Desjardins in
Quebec,
Canada, pioneered credit unions. Desjardins opened the first credit union in North America in 1900, from his home in
Lévis, Quebec, marking the beginning of the
Mouvement Desjardins. He was interested in bringing financial protection to working people.
United Kingdom British
building societies developed into general-purpose savings and banking institutions with ‘one member, one vote’ ownership and can be seen as a form of financial cooperative (although many
de-mutualised into conventionally owned banks in the 1980s and 1990s). Until 2017, the
Co-operative Group included
The Co-operative Bank; however, despite its name, the Co-operative Bank was not itself a true
co-operative as it was not owned directly by its members. Instead it was part-owned by a holding company which was itself a co-operative – the
Co-operative Banking Group. It still retains an
insurance provider,
The Co-operative Insurance, noted for promoting
ethical investment. For the financial year 2021/2022, the British building society sector had assets of around £483, of which more than half were accounted for by the cooperative
Nationwide Building Society. File:Co-operative banking in Europe - facts & figures 2017.png|alt=European Co-operative Banking: Facts and figures 2017|thumb|European Co-operative Banking: Facts and figures 2017. Based on the 2017 Key statistics collected by the
EACB.
Continental Europe Important continental cooperative banking systems include the
Crédit Agricole,
Crédit Mutuel, and
Groupe BPCE in France,
Grupo Caja Rural and
Cajamar Cooperative Group in Spain,
Rabobank in the Netherlands, the
German Cooperative Financial Group in Germany,
ICCREA Banca and
Cassa Centrale Banca - Credito Cooperativo Italiano in Italy,
Migros and Coop Bank in Switzerland, and the
Raiffeisen Banking Group in Austria. The cooperative banks that are members of the
European Association of Co-operative Banks have 130 million customers, 4 trillion euros in assets, and 17% of Europe's deposits. The International Confederation of Cooperative Banks (CIBP) is the oldest association of cooperative banks at international level. In the
Nordic countries, there is a clear distinction between
mutual savings banks (Sparbank) and true
credit unions (Andelsbank). In Italy, a 2015 reform required popular banks () with assets of greater than €8 billion to
demutualize into joint-stock companies ().
United States Credit unions in the United States had 96.3 million members in 2013 and assets of $1.06 trillion. The sector had five times lower failure rate than other banks during the
2008 financial crisis and more than doubled lending to small businesses between 2008 and 2016, from $30 billion to $60 billion, while lending to small businesses overall during the same period declined by around $100 billion. Public trust in credit unions in the United States stands at 60%, compared to 30% for big banks and small businesses are 80% less likely to be dissatisfied with a credit union than with a big bank.
India Cooperative banks serve an important role in the
Indian economy, especially in rural areas. In urban areas, they mainly serve to small industry and self-employed workers. They are registered under the Cooperative Societies Act, 1912. They are regulated by the
Reserve Bank of India under the
Banking Regulation Act, 1949 and Banking Laws (Application to Cooperative Societies) Act, 1965.
Anyonya Sahakari Mandali, established in 1889 in the province of
Baroda, is the earliest known cooperative credit union in India. The Cooperative Credit System in India consists of Short Term and Long Term credit institutions. The short-term credit structure which takes care of the short term (1 to 5 years) credit needs of the farmers is a three-tier structure in most of the States viz., Primary Agricultural Cooperative Societies (PACCS) at the village level, District Central Cooperative Banks at the District level and State Cooperative Bank at the State level and two-tier in some States voz., State Cooperative Banks and PACCS. The long term credit structure caters to the long term credit needs of the farmers (up to 20 years) is a two-tier structure with Primary Agriculture and Rural Development Banks (PARDBs) at the village level and State Agriculture and Rural Development Banks. The State Cooperative Banks and Central Cooperative Banks are licensed by Reserve Bank of India under the Banking Regulation Act. While the StCBs and DCCBs function like a normal Bank they focus mainly on agricultural credit. While Reserve Bank of India is the Regulating Authority,
National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) provides refinance support and takes care of inspection of StCBs and DCCBs. The first Cooperative Credit Society in India was started in 1904 at Thiroor in Tiruvallur District in Tamil Nadu Primary Cooperative Banks which are otherwise known as Urban Cooperative Banks are registered as Cooperative Societies under the Cooperative Societies Acts of the concerned States or the Multi-State Cooperative Societies Act function in urban areas and their business is similar to that of Commercial Banks. They are licensed by RBI to do banking business. Reserve Bank of India is both the controlling and inspecting authority for the Primary Cooperative Banks.
Israel Ofek (Hebrew: אופק) is a cooperative initiative founded in mid-2012 that intended to establish the first cooperative bank in Israel. == Microcredit and microfinance ==