On March 9, 2012, Nicaragua’s peak exporter association, the Asociación de Productores y Exportadores de Nicaragua (APEN), recognized the Masiguito Cooperative as the country’s fastest growing exporter to the United States (COSEP 2012). A twenty-two-year-old cooperative at the time of the APEN award, Masiguito was owned, surprisingly, not by large cattle ranchers from Nicaragua’s vibrant Pacific Coast region but by small and medium-sized ranchers from the ostensibly stagnant and largely destitute central region. Located in the department of Boaco, it processed a range of dairy products but specialized in Salvadorean-style cheeses for export to Central America and the United States. Though still modest in size by world standards, Masiguito ranked among Nicaragua’s top dairy exporters (CETREX 2013; Banco Central de Nicaragua 2010).
Nevertheless, Masiguito is only one among a handful of similar export-oriented cheese-processing cooperatives that have emerged over the past three decades in the highlands of Nicaragua’s central departments of Matagalpa, Boaco, Chontales, and Rio San Juan. Such a remarkable process of industrial transformation was highly unlikely in this area (Reference Perez-AlemanPerez-Aleman 2011). Wedged between the Atlantic Autonomous Regions and Lake Nicaragua, most of the area’s rugged territory is sparsely populated, isolated, and impoverished. Unlike the dynamic Pacific plains of the country, where the sugar, peanut, and cattle industries flourish, the central highland region, for much of its history, largely remained beyond the reach of the national Managua-based Nicaraguan state and the multinational corporations investing in the country (Reference DunkerleyDunkerley 1988; Reference EnríquezEnríquez 2010). Even under Sandinismo’s 1980s developmentalist and redistributive program, the region’s mountainous area escaped widespread intervention, prompting local inhabitants to join the counterrevolutionary “Contra” forces en masse (Reference NúñezNúñez 1995; Reference MartinezMartinez 1993; Reference BrownBrown 2001).
And yet, over the past two and a half decades, in the post-Sandinista era, this seemingly unchanging, remote, war-torn area has experienced an unprecedented industrial transformation. During that period, seven cooperatives adopted what previous studies refer to as a “Gebhardian” organizational model, named for Hannes Gebhard, founder of the Finnish cooperative movement (e.g., Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013). Under this model, rancher cooperatives process dairy products for export, collect raw milk from small and medium-sized suppliers through vast refrigerated networks, and deploy “high road” sourcing and labor relations arrangements that ensure high stable milk prices and improved labor conditions and wages, respectively (Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013; Reference SkurnikSkurnik 2002). Its adoption has not only led to surging economic performance benefiting cooperative members but has also enhanced the incomes, skills, and upward mobility of workers and ranchers living in nearby communities, thereby delivering “mutual gains” (Reference OstermanOsterman 2000).
What conditions might elicit industrial transformation is a classic question of international development theory. How those transformations might deliver mutual gains is a necessary complement to that fundamental query. This article addresses these two related questions. Exploiting a “deviant case study” design that deliberately narrows the explanatory potential of prevailing state-focused new industrial policy (NIP) and multinational-centered global value chain (GVC) theories, it offers a novel explanation that draws heavily on ideational accounts from political science and sociology. These accounts assert that a variety of socioeconomic and political processes and outcomes, including organizational changes, may be explained by actors’ ideologies. Those ideologies frame actors’ appraisals of different problems and their consequent responses (Reference GeertzGeertz 1973; Reference SewellSewell 1985; Reference CampbellCampbell 1998; Reference SchmidtSchmidt 2008).
This article redeploys and refines those ideational arguments to account for the industrial transformation with mutual gains of the Gebhardian cooperatives in the highlands of Central Nicaragua. Relying on process-tracing and comparative methods, it reveals how distinct teams of professionals—labeled “developmental” for their transformative interventions—systematically negotiated and collaborated with groups of ranchers in the area to select and implement the new organizational model. Employed by the Finnish International Development Agency (FINNIDA), the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA), and the Italian Development Cooperation agency, these developmental professionals spearheaded three programs: FINNIDA’s thirteen-year Rural Livestock Development Program (Proyecto de Desarrollo Ganadero, PRODEGA), SIDA’s ten-year Agricultural Development Fund (Fondo de Desarrollo Agropecuario, FondeAgro), and the Italian Development Cooperation’s ten-year Rice Rehabilitation and Peasant Development Project (Proyecto de Rehabilitación Arrocera y de Desarrollo Campesino, PRADC). In explaining the developmental professionals’ actions, this study suggests that they were profoundly influenced by social democratic ideology and informed by a base of expert knowledge borne by their experience and training. These two key explanatory factors fueled and molded the professionals’ transformative mission and their interactions with local ranchers, as well as influenced the practices of the organizations they created, fostering mutual gains, particularly in rancher communities that shared a crucial background condition: a prerevolutionary collective experience. That experience allowed those rancher communities to engage productively with the developmental professionals.
Industrial Transformation in Late Developers: An Overview of the Literature
As they undergo industrial transformations, firms acquire the necessary technology, experience, and coordination to effectively compete in world markets on the basis of price, quality, and timely delivery. Such processes demand substantial capital investment but especially depend on the adoption of knowledge necessary to shift into higher-value economic activities (Reference GerschenkronGerschenkron 1962; Reference GereffiGereffi 1999; Reference Amsden, Serra and StiglitzAmsden 2008; Reference DonerDoner 2009). While those economic achievements are consistent with a variety of organizational models, only some will also offer improved conditions for workers and communities, or “mutual gains” (Reference Piore and SabelPiore and Sabel 1984; Reference PiresPires 2008; Reference OstermanOsterman 1994, Reference Osterman2000, Reference Osterman2018).
To account for industrial transformations in late developers, two competing literatures have emerged, each underscoring the galvanizing role of a distinct institutional actor. The new industrial policy perspective (NIP) places the state at the center of its analysis and emphasizes the strong economic nationalism that drives public bureaucracies responsible for industrial policy—an ideological commitment that motivates and shapes their interventions (Reference JohnsonJohnson 1982; Reference GaoGao 2002). This literature also underscores public-private consultation, collaboration, and assistance as an indispensable precondition for policy making, with institutional instruments including, among others, a diversity of state-business councils (Reference RodrikRodrik 2004; Reference Sabel, Sabel, Fernández-Arias, Hausmann, Rodríguez-Clare and SteinSabel 2012; Reference SchneiderSchneider 2015) and much more extensive “national innovation systems” (Reference Cimoli, Dosi and StiglitzCimoli, Dosi, and Stiglitz 2009; Reference MazzucatoMazzucato 2013).
While this literature has shed light on the changes in firm technology, experience, and coordination that accompany industrial transformations, it has been much less explicit about the implications of these organizational changes for mutual gains. It is partly in this respect that a second literature proves instructive. In underscoring the leading role of multinational buyers in global value chains (GVCs), the GVC literature has inserted a concern with both “economic and social upgrading” into its arguments (Reference Barrientos, Gereffi and RossiBarrientos, Gereffi, and Rossi 2011; Reference Gereffi and LeeGereffi and Lee 2016). It posits that, through a combination of pedagogical and disciplining interventions, global buyers spur shifts among their suppliers into higher-value activities. It also suggests that in response to advocacy campaigns and national regulations, these global buyers may deploy private certification and inspection systems and provide expert assistance to similarly propagate “high road” industrial relations systems among their suppliers. However, the evidence remains mixed, and deep disagreements persist about the developmental impact of global buyers on late developer firms and communities (Reference Pipkin and FuentesPipkin and Fuentes 2017).
It is in this context that this article proposes an alternative explanation for industrial transformation with mutual gains—one that builds on the GVC and NIP literatures to offer a third path focused on the catalyzing role of a different institutional actor: the “developmental professional” of foreign aid agencies. Like the GVC literature, this proposed third path seeks to account for both economic and social upgrading. Yet, in highlighting the transformative interventions of actors employed by public agencies—namely, those devoted to foreign aid—it hews closer to the NIP literature. It also builds on this latter literature in its discussion of how the developmental professionals engage in ongoing collaboration and negotiation with their private sector counterparts. Finally, when it comes to the explanatory variables, the proposed account brings to the fore both the foreign expertise underscored by the GVC literature and the ideology that arises in some of the NIP arguments.
Developmental professionals and a third path for industrial transformation with mutual gains
The figure of the developmental professional as an agent of rapid industrial change emerges clearly from the review of the case of the Gebhardian cheese-processing cooperatives in Central Nicaragua, where teams of professionals spearheaded wide-ranging organizational changes at the seven studied cooperatives. Two key variables accounted for the developmental professionals’ actions in their transformative campaign, distinguishing them from other comparable actors: their social democratic ideology and their expert knowledge. At the same time, the interventions of these developmental professionals proved conducive to full adoption of the Gebhardian model only when targeted ranchers shared a prerevolutionary collective experience—a crucial background condition.
Ideologies have long received significant attention in the ideational literature of political science and sociology. Geertz (Reference Geertz1973) defines them as interpretive frameworks that render meaningful otherwise incomprehensible situations. They constrain certain actions by blocking out particular possibilities as inconceivable, and enable others by “ordering [actors’] understanding of the social world and of themselves, by constructing their identities, goals, aspirations, and by rendering certain issues significant or salient and others not” (Reference Emirbayer and GoodwinEmirbayer and Goodwin 1994, 1441). Ideologies represent symbolic formations with “an internal logic and organization of their own” (Reference Emirbayer and GoodwinEmirbayer and Goodwin 1994, 1441). They allow collectivities and individuals to understand their relations to one another (Reference GuillénGuillén 1994; Reference Silbey, Garth and SaratSilbey 1998), specify valued ends and interests, and offer cause-effect principles useful to elaborate “practical plans” (Reference SewellSewell 1985).
Marxism, which specifies a unifying, overarching, timeless end by enshrining a “kingdom of equality” free of alienation and dehumanization (Reference PipesPipes 2003, 9), represents a mainspring for various competing ideologies, including revisionism, or social democracy (Reference KołakowskiKołakowski 2005). Associated with the ideas of Eduard Bernstein and, before him, the British Fabians, social democratic thought adopts a gradualist and pluralist approach to socialism, denying the widely held Marxist assumption that revolution and a cataclysmic final battle are inevitable. Rather, it encourages the Marxist movement to further the immediate interests of the working class by degrees, through democratic means and legislation (Reference BernsteinBernstein 1911). It also welcomes alliances with nonsocialists if they advance the interests of the working class, and specifically includes the petty bourgeoisie and peasantry in its reformist program. Furthermore, social democrats support the right of trade organizations to control production and claim that Marx explicitly fomented cooperative societies. Social democracy thus offers “a program of laborious, gradual, and unspectacular improvement” (Reference KołakowskiKołakowski 2005, 446).
In Nicaragua, social democratic thought both enabled and constrained the actions of the developmental professionals that transformed the dairy industry. The foreign aid agencies that employed the developmental professionals had shared a close ideological affinity with the Sandinistas since the revolution, for Sandinismo embraced many of the same principles as social democratic thought.Footnote 1 In fact, FINNIDA, SIDA, and the Italian Development Cooperation played a crucial supporting role for some of the revolutionary government’s main agro-industrial investment projects. FINNIDA, for instance, provided most of the resources to refurbish Managua’s four largest milk-processing plants, managed at the time by the Sandinistas’ Empresa Nicaragüense de Lácteos (ENILAC) (CIERA 1985a; Reference EskolaEskola 2003; Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013). Similarly, by 1985, SIDA had provided support for the construction of the Victoria de Julio sugar mill, and the Italian Development Cooperation funded nutritional and fishery programs (CIERA 1985a).
Former Sandinista leaders and even program evaluation documents recognized these agencies’ ideological embrace of the revolution’s ideals. For example, the former director of the Sandinistas’ ENILAC, who negotiated PRODEGA with Finnish authorities, recalled that “they shared our political views, they supported the Revolution.”Footnote 2 That was a view echoed in PRODEGA’s evaluation, which made clear that in the aftermath of the revolution, “Finland’s continuing cooperation with Nicaragua” would emphasize “preserving some of the country’s previous social gains” (Reference Caldecott, Slujis, Aguilar and LounelaCaldecott et al. 2012, 50).
That is why, from the beginning, the developmental professionals employed by PRODEGA, PRADC, and FondeAgro both focused on the social democratic priorities of improving the standard of living of peasants, workers, and small and medium-sized farmers (Reference EskolaEskola 2003, 61), and avoided alternative models benefiting mainly large producers. For instance, as the Finnish embassy, which worked closely with its aid agency’s developmental professionals, made clear, the plan was not to aid “the largest” and “most privileged” farmers who concentrated land ownership, but to “[mitigate] poverty” and “[generate] permanent improvements to the standard of living of families that grow agricultural products on a small scale, particularly, but not exclusively, cattle owners” (Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013, 6). Similarly, for SIDA, the “main objective [was] poverty reduction of small and medium sized … dairy producers” (Reference Fajardo, Ammour and CruzFajardo, Ammour, and Cruz 2006, 5). Those commitments were grounded in the enduring relationship between these agencies and Sandinista authorities, and drew from their shared ideology’s valued ends and interests and cause-effect principles.
Yet, if ideology played a central role in guiding the developmental professionals’ transformative actions in Central Nicaragua, so did their professional expertise. The developmental professionals—all specialists in engineering and consulting—and their agencies had acquired this expert knowledge through training and experience, some of it in Sandinista Nicaragua. It armed them with organizational repertoires (Reference JohnsonJohnson 2007; Reference Baron, Hannan and BurtonBaron, Hannan, and Burton 1999; Reference Burton, Schoonhoven and RomanelliBurton 2001) necessary to bridge the gap between the abstract ideological principles, terminology, and concepts of social democracy and Sewell’s (Reference Sewell1985) “practical plans.” These repertoires contained different organizational models, procedures, and practices that the professionals could deploy in Central Nicaragua. Expert knowledge also proved useful in clarifying what kinds of environmental resources the different models required, how different practices might coalesce, and what their likely social consequences might be. Additionally, expert knowledge endowed developmental professionals with both prestige among local actors and a keen awareness of the need to engage with “beneficiaries,” namely leading ranchers in Central Nicaragua.
The engagement with local ranchers that the developmental professionals pursued, however, produced divergent results, and that variation underscores the role of an important background condition: ranchers’ prerevolutionary collective experience. The condition refers to the extent to which rancher communities both participated in joint endeavors during the Somoza period and emerged from the Sandinista Revolution, and its agrarian reform, without major alterations to their leadership and land tenure patterns. It echoes Hirschman’s (Reference Hirschman1984) “principle of conservation and mutation of social energy” insofar as it suggests that the ranchers’ earlier “bent for collective action had not really left them.” Rather, that “social energy” was renewed after the revolution, as ranchers already experienced in cooperative organizations or other forms of productive collaboration re-embarked on collective schemes, this time led by the developmental professionals. Having both encountered and, to a degree at least, resolved many common collective action problems during the Somoza years and jointly overcome what many of them saw as the hostile environment of the revolutionary years, these rancher communities were better positioned to actively collaborate and negotiate with the developmental professionals.
Research Design and Methods
During the 1990s and 2000s, the seven studied cooperatives in Central Nicaragua adopted the Gebhardian cooperative model (see Table 1). In accounting for the industrial transformation that produced the Gebhardian cooperatives, the design of this deviant case study deliberately narrows the explanatory potential of the two sets of arguments offered by the conventional wisdom, namely the industrial policy and global value chain (GVC) approaches. On the one hand, instead of exhibiting the type of nationalist bureaucratic intervention that industrial policy accounts would predict, the area has lacked a significant presence of the Nicaraguan state. This was particularly evident during the early years of the period under study, when post-Sandinista Liberal governments abandoned most policies of economic support and regulation. Indeed, as the region’s first Gebhardian cooperatives flourished, the national state underwent a drastic process of retrenchment that began with the Chamorro administration. The move to liberalize financial markets and trade was felt especially acutely in the specific case of agricultural cooperatives, as Enríquez (Reference Enríquez2010) and Damiani (Reference Damiani1994) have shown.
* These are cases in which two original cooperatives have merged to supply a jointly owned processing plant.
If the post-Sandinista governments largely abandoned Sandinista industrial development plans, large dairy buyers in Managua—the “lead firms” of global value chains—proved equally disinterested in spurring local development. GVC accounts would predict a mentoring and regulatory role for these lead firms. Instead, large dairy buyers in Nicaragua, some of them subsidiaries of multinational corporations, extended their sourcing tentacles to the central region only after the emergence of the first cooperatives.Footnote 3 And even when they did, they failed to establish mentorship relationships with supplier cooperatives. Rather, they pressured ranchers to lower raw milk prices and often opposed cooperative processing altogether because it both strengthened rancher bargaining power and increased competition in the domestic processed dairy good market.Footnote 4
The absence of these two driving forces of industrial change with mutual gains in Central Nicaragua thus sets the stage for this detailed deviant case study. Its heuristic design is devised to generate new hypotheses (Reference Bennett, Sprinz and Wolinsky-NahmiasBennett 2004). The following section describes how I collected and analyzed the evidence.
Data collection and analysis
To develop this case study, I gathered evidence through fieldwork combining sixty interviews (see Table 2), archival research, and site visits. Interviews with a wide range of informants lasted between one and four hours and were usually recorded. I also conducted archival research in government, university, industry, and foreign aid agency offices and websites, analyzing the content of the industry-related material to corroborate or refute interviewee accounts. Finally, I visited over ten production sites and collection centers to observe the production process and conditions of work.
* Some interviewees straddle more than one category.
To analyze the data, I relied on process-tracing and cross-case comparisons. As George and Bennett (Reference George and Bennett2005, 224) explain, process tracing is “the only observational means of moving beyond covariation alone as a source of causal influence.” It is ideally suited for asking “how” questions, focusing on sequential processes within a particular historical case (Reference Van EveraVan Evera 1997; Reference MahoneyMahoney 2010). Thus, using the abundant material collected and drawing on process-tracing methods, I developed narratives describing the historical trajectories of the seven successful Gebhardian cooperatives. Those narratives revealed the central explanatory role of developmental professionals’ ideology and expert knowledge. They also showed how these two factors interacted with each other and with environmental conditions—most notably, ranchers’ prerevolution collective experience—to shape processes and outcomes of change.
In addition, the collected evidence clarified the sequences through which six different clusters of dairy producers in Central Nicaragua adopted alternative organizational approaches during the same period. For one, as previous studies have noted (e.g., Reference Artola, Parrilli, Pietrobelli and RabellottiArtola and Parrilli 2006), at least three other approaches continued to play a prominent role in the area by the 2000s: rancher cooperatives and associations, both of them supplying large Managua-based pasteurizing plants but failing to process export dairy goods themselves; and independent family-owned corporations with export-oriented processing facilities in the area but devoid of “high road” labor and supplier relations systems. In addition, other available (though much less prevalent) models included the common-ownership Sandinista Agricultural Cooperatives (CAS), the model farm approach with independent ranchers, and the locally established processing cooperatives. However, none offered the Gebhardian approach’s combination of economic (i.e., lucrative export-oriented processing) and social gains (i.e., significant improvements in small and medium-sized rancher and worker conditions) (see Appendix 2). I therefore used this information to carry out comparisons that complemented the process-tracing analysis. The findings are presented in the following section, which begins with an overview of the Gebhardian cooperative model.
Transforming Nicaragua’s Cheese Industry: Upgrading with Mutual Gains
The organizational model of the Gebhardian cooperatives in Central Nicaragua incorporates three critical components. First, each cooperative owns and manages an industrial facility. In that facility, workers employ local and imported technology to produce processed dairy goods for domestic consumption and especially for export. Second, each cooperative manages a broad and complex network of suppliers to source the requisite raw milk (see Table 3). That network is connected to a fully refrigerated, cooperative-owned supply chain that includes collection centers, quality testing labs, and specialized trucks to transport the cold milk. Members and nonmembers alike daily deliver their raw milk to either collection centers or trucks. Lastly, each cooperative has introduced novel “high road” labor and supplier relations systems. The new systems place emphasis on worker and supplier loyalty by providing incentives such as higher-than-average wages and benefits for the former and steady raw milk prices and a variety of on-ranch services (e.g., veterinary, pasture upgrades, artificial insemination) for the latter.
Source: Author interviews, 2012.
* These are cases in which two original cooperatives have merged to supply a jointly owned processing plant.
The adoption of this new organizational model delivered mutual gains over the studied period. Cheese exports from these cooperatives boomed after the early 2000s, almost doubling between 2007 and 2012 despite the fallout from the Great Recession (CETREX 2013). Cooperatives also increasingly sold to the stringent American market, which, by 2012, absorbed almost a quarter of all their exports (CETREX 2013) (see Figure 1).
In addition, observers and participants report remarkable improvements in the cooperatives’ raw milk productivity and quality, as well as worker and rancher conditions. Thus, for instance, at the two largest and oldest Gebhardian cooperatives, San Francisco de Asís and Masiguito, average individual supplier production grew by 20 percent between 1990 and 1997 (Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013). Similarly, at Nicacentro, another leading cooperative of more recent creation, separate evaluations revealed “notable improvements in milk quality” (Reference Berra and GalettoBerra and Galetto 2010) and significant increases in raw milk prices (Reference Prins, Junkin, Barriga, Orozco, Melo and AguilarPrins et al. 2008).
For employees, cooperatives have proven beneficial as well. Ranch workers received enhanced training in cattle herding and husbandry, milking procedures, and raw milk handling, leading to lower turnover and rising wages (Reference Fajardo, Ammour and CruzFajardo, Ammour, and Cruz 2006; Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013). Workers in collection centers and processing plants have been similarly trained in the skills needed to manage the processing equipment, comply with clean manufacturing practices, produce a variety of dairy products, and conduct a full battery of laboratory tests on raw milk. Their “high level of technical ability” (Reference Artola, Parrilli, Pietrobelli and RabellottiArtola and Parrilli 2006) is compensated with long-term contracts, vacation time, wages in excess of the legal minimum, and a full menu of benefits above those required by law (e.g., transportation and access to some of the cooperatives’ social services), which render these as some of the more attractive jobs in the area.Footnote 5
An ideational account of industrial transformation with mutual gains
How can we account for this process of industrial transformation with mutual gains? The proposed argument emphasizes the explanatory role of two central variables: the developmental professionals’ social democratic ideology and base of expert knowledge. It also underscores the influence of rancher communities’ prerevolutionary collective experience, a crucial background condition that supplied them with the requisite “social energy.” As the following description shows, those three factors set the Gebhardian cooperatives apart from the previously described organizational clusters operating simultaneously in the same region and industry (see Table 4).
* These organizations were targeted by developmental professionals.
** These organizational clusters exhibit internal variation, with only some located in rancher communities with prerevolutionary collective experience.
Background condition: The conserved social energy of the pre-Sandinista Revolution collective experience
Although the seven Gebhardian cooperatives only emerged in the 1990s and 2000s, a review of their members’ histories reveals that they shared a significant collective experience during the Somoza years. The role and uniqueness of that background experience among the studied cooperatives vis-à-vis cooperatives similarly targeted by developmental professionals but failing to adopt a full Gebhardian model becomes evident through an examination of the land tenure patterns and production activities prevalent in the central region, both before and during the Sandinista Revolution (see Table 5).
On the eve of the revolution, two distinct production systems coexisted in the region’s departments of Matagalpa, Boaco, Chontales, and Rio San Juan. In the drier lowland areas by Lake Nicaragua (e.g., the municipalities of Acoyapa, Juigalpa, and Comalapa), the Somozas and their associates owned massive landholdings dedicated to export-oriented beef, milk, and rice production and well-connected to necessary production infrastructure.Footnote 6 By contrast, in the mountainous highland area farther from the lake’s shores (e.g., the municipalities of Matiguás, Muy Muy, Camoapa, Boaco, and Nueva Guinea), a small and medium-sized peasantry, mostly displaced by the Pacific Coast cotton boom of the 1960s and 1970s, had gradually pushed back the agricultural frontier.Footnote 7
It was among this peasantry that the collective experience was forged during the Somoza years, albeit through two distinct paths. Some, located in Rio San Juan’s municipality of Nueva Guinea, were beneficiaries of the Somocista agrarian reform’s Rigoberto Cabezas project, which, with support from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), organized peasants into production and credit cooperatives that sold grain to Salvadorean, Honduran, and Costa Rican merchants.Footnote 8 Others, in municipalities such as Matiguás, Muy Muy, Camoapa, and Boaco, had begun selling raw milk to large processing plants in Managua and Matagalpa during the 1970s, becoming increasingly prominent suppliers throughout the decade.Footnote 9
With the revolution, conditions changed substantially in this central region as the Sandinistas implemented their agrarian reform. But the reform also affected the region’s two production systems differentially, since the bulk of expropriations targeted Somocista land (Reference DunkerleyDunkerley 1988; Reference LuciakLuciak 1987; Reference MartinezMartinez 1993). Thus, in the largely Somocista-owned lowland municipalities, Sandinista expropriations were swift and widespread. They concentrated expropriated land into massive state-run farms (e.g., Roberto Huembes, Modesto Duarte, Heroes de Pancasan), which supplied Managua-based pasteurizing plants run by the Sandinista’s ENILAC (CIERA 1984, 1985b, 1986).Footnote 10
In the highland municipalities, by contrast, expropriations, which targeted mostly National Guard members and “Contras,” were fewer in number and smaller in acreage. They were also overshadowed by the more prevalent Sandinista process of land titling for individual peasants (Reference LuciakLuciak 1987). That is why the reform was much less disruptive of land tenure patterns in these areas. If anything, it was its neglect of the peasantry—especially its “anti-peasant policies” (Reference MartinezMartinez 1993)—that had a greater impact among local residents, since many of them, disappointed with the revolution, joined the Contras (Reference MartinezMartinez 1993; Reference BrownBrown 2001).
After the revolution, the legacies of both the pre-reform tenure patterns and the agrarian reform’s expropriation process affected the long-term prospects of industrial transformation among local cooperatives. The combination of large-scale Somocista landholdings during the 1970s and Sandinista state-run farms during the 1980s deprived the lowland municipalities of any inherited collective experience. New ranchers in places like Juigalpa and Acoyapa formed cooperatives during the 1990s. But despite their prime location and substantial access to foreign aid, they failed to establish fully functioning Gebhardian models.Footnote 11 Instead, a variety of obstacles, such as distrust, disagreements over leadership, and an absence of a shared vision, undermined their efforts.Footnote 12 As the Acoyapa cooperative’s former president bitterly recalled, “I spent ten years trying to get us to move into processing … But it’s impossible here! It all ended in an assembly, when I stupidly asked for a vote [to approve a foreign aid project that would fund a new processing plant] and lost. I should have divided that cooperative, and formed a new one with the fifty [members] who voted yes.”Footnote 13
In contrast to the lowlands, the frontier highland municipalities, though devastated by the war, retained the collective experience from the prerevolution years. For despite the reform’s expropriation of some of the largest National-Guard-member and Contra landholdings, most of the same groups who had supplied the Managua- and Matagalpa-based pasteurizing plants, or formed cooperatives as part of Somoza’s Rigoberto Cabezas project in Nueva Guinea, continued to live in these areas. It was among them that an earlier “bent for collective action” remained “even though the movements in which they had participated [were] aborted or petered out” (Reference HirschmanHirschman 1984, 43). Despite lacking the type of “radical” prior experiences that Hirschman (Reference Hirschman1984) examines, these groups—and particularly their leading families—were ready to renew their commitment to joint productive action.
As COOPROLECHE’s president put it, “We had worked with the National Bank of Nicaragua from ’73 to ’80 in Nueva Guinea and Boaco, organizing two cooperatives.… We received help from people specialized in cooperativism, and we were convinced by the doctrine of cooperatives, we were convinced of its benefits.”Footnote 14 That experience, which had led to the emergence of a few leading local families, allowed them to productively engage with foreign aid developmental professionals.
Tracing the process of transformation: Ideology, expert knowledge, and the adoption of the Gebhardian cooperative model
While prior collective experience offered a crucial background condition, it was the intervention of foreign aid agencies’ developmental professionals that proved indispensable for the emergence of Central Nicaragua’s Gebhardian cooperatives. It was only in those places where these professionals worked closely with leading ranchers that successful processes of industrial transformation with mutual gains unfolded.Footnote 15 And it was by drawing on their social democratic ideology and substantial expertise to negotiate and collaborate with those local partners that they instituted the new organizational model.
The process of transformation began as the Sandinista Revolution drew to a close in early 1990, when the first team of developmental professionals, employed by FINNIDA’s PRODEGA (1990–2003), arrived in Nicaragua. The product of an agreement following the 1987 state visit to Finland by Sandinista Minister of Agriculture Jaime Wheelock, PRODEGA was intended to raise farm incomes, expand the country’s waning milk production, and foster milk and cheese processing in Nicaragua’s central departments of Boaco and Chontales, where anti-Sandinismo had flourished (Reference EskolaEskola 2003). However, the original agreement included little guidance regarding implementation, leaving decisions on the favored dairy-production organizational model to the program’s developmental professionals.
Much the same occurred with the Italian Development Cooperation and SIDA dairy programs, which would follow PRODEGA. The developmental professionals of the former agency, under the aegis of its PRADC (1997–2006), first approached the cattle ranchers of the region of Nueva Guinea, who would soon form the successful COOPROLECHE, in the late 1990s. But in the initial stages of the aid program, they remained undecided about the specifics of implementation.Footnote 16 That echoed the events that unfolded in Matagalpa under SIDA’s Agricultural Development Fund (FondeAgro) (2001–2010). There, developmental professionals in the program’s coordinating unit (particularly those involved with the agribusiness component) pursued a gradual and experimental process of selection and implementation (Reference Fajardo, Ammour and CruzFajardo, Ammour, and Cruz 2006; Reference Prins, Junkin, Barriga, Orozco, Melo and AguilarPrins et al. 2008).
This lack of a predetermined organizational approach in the initial stages of the three programs, however, should not conceal the general ideological agreement and expertise among all the professionals. For, as a review of their early activities reveals, they all built on their shared social democratic ideology, with its emphasis on equality and gradual improvements in working class conditions through diverse cross-class alliances. Furthermore, their professional training and experience furnished them with organizational repertoires, prestige, flexibility, and the capacity to negotiate with local leaders.
The combination of ideology and expertise clearly informed organizational model selection among FINNIDA’s PRODEGA developmental professionals. The program’s records show that they considered at least two alternatives before choosing the Gebhardian cooperative approach. First, they explored the possibility of upgrading the so-called Sandinista Agricultural Cooperatives (CASs). Created through the Sandinista agrarian reform, the CASs were consistent with social democratic thought, bringing together former hacienda workers who jointly owned and managed expropriated hacienda land. However, during the revolution, efficient CAS production remained elusive, partly due to a dearth of expertise among leaders (Reference DamianiDamiani 1994). Moreover, the ideologically motivated but also pragmatic FINNIDA developmental professionals soon realized that the changing political tide in the country eroded the necessary environmental resources for CAS upgrading: the unexpected electoral loss of the Sandinistas in February 1990 elicited relentless opposition by the newly elected, anti-Sandinista Liberal government (Reference Caldecott, Slujis, Aguilar and LounelaCaldecott et al. 2012). Additionally, local ranchers unequivocally resisted a model tainted with memories of war and destruction.Footnote 17
Given this environment, the FINNIDA developmental professionals evaluated a second possible organizational model from their repertoire: the model farm. Under this plan, ten model farms would serve as points of dissemination and centers for agricultural extension. The model farm approach seemed to fulfill the preferences of both anti-Sandinista leading ranchers and the Liberal government. As one of the program’s reports argues, the new government in particular favored “the idea that wealth created in pre-selected clusters of private companies in locations with optimal conditions for their performance would inevitably ‘trickle down’ to the poor” (Reference Caldecott, Slujis, Aguilar and LounelaCaldecott et al. 2012, 76). Yet, the model encountered an insurmountable obstacle: the ideological opposition to excessive income inequality and concentrated land ownership expressed by professionals, FINNIDA and the Finnish embassy. As the program’s final evaluation matter-of-factly explains, the professionals abandoned the plan because “the ten model farms were obviously among the largest, and as such, most privileged from the start” (Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al 2013, 6).
Only then did the FINNIDA developmental professionals turn to the Gebhardian cooperative form. The model brought together small and medium-sized private ranchers to process dairy products, promising a transformation with mutual gains. Ideologically, it was consistent with their social democratic thought. Hannes Gebhard, the inspirational figure behind this organizational model, had opposed unrestrained competition, which he believed engendered excessive egoism, undermined solidarity, and alienated people. However, he also feared revolutionary and state socialism and thus supported “the cooperation of those with small means … trade unions and cooperative societies” (cited in Reference SkurnikSkurnik 2002, 107).
In practice, the Gebhardian model also offered promising economic and social prospects. In Finland, these cooperatives accounted for 97 percent of the country’s total dairy production by the early 1990s (Reference Bager and MichelsenBager and Michelsen 1994). According to Finnish historiography, they had also contributed to national integration by “tying rural folk and occupations to … rapid industrialisation” and wedding the countryside to the “embryonic industrial-commercial market” (Reference SkurnikSkurnik 2002, 121).
The developmental professionals hoped it would play much the same role in Central Nicaragua. Above all, it appeared to provide an ideal compromise that could garner the necessary legitimacy in Nicaragua’s turbulent context. As a PRODEGA evaluation stated, it seemed “sufficiently ‘socialist’ to make the Sandinistas happy, but sufficiently ‘capitalist’ so that the former ‘contras’—and the new Government—could accept it” (Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013, 24).
Although such discussions on model selection were most extensively recorded throughout FINNIDA’s PRODEGA experience, the evidence suggests that similar debates unfolded in the Italian Development Cooperation’s PRADC and SIDA’s FondeAgro programs (see Table 6). And though the routes they took to select the Gebhardian model differed somewhat from PRODEGA’s path, the role of ideology and expert knowledge proved equally important in that final determination. Take the example of SIDA’s FondeAgro in the department of Matagalpa. In that case, the debate centered on whether to pursue one of three models: a corporation with producer-owned shares that emulated existing Salvadorean family-owned processors;Footnote 18 a rancher association supplying raw milk to large domestic and international processors, such as Parmalat or Eskimo; or the Gebhardian alternative (Reference Prins, Junkin, Barriga, Orozco, Melo and AguilarPrins et al. 2008).
Sources: Information from Reference Caldecott, Slujis, Aguilar and LounelaCaldecott et al. 2012; Reference Prins, Junkin, Barriga, Orozco, Melo and AguilarPrins et al. 2008; Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013; interview with COOPROLECHE president, October 3, 2012.
FondeAgro’s developmental professionals assessed these options on the grounds of their ideology’s emphasis on gradual improvements in the conditions of the most vulnerable (particularly small and medium producers with incomes ranging from $0.50 to $2.50 per day; Reference Prins, Junkin, Barriga, Orozco, Melo and AguilarPrins et al. 2008), and its preference for cross-class alliances with actors such as Liberal state authorities and, especially, leading local ranchers. But they also surmised the different models’ resource demands, undertaking “technical studies” and learning about the experience of the trailblazing Finnish PRODEGA (Reference Berra and GalettoBerra and Galetto 2010; Reference Prins, Junkin, Barriga, Orozco, Melo and AguilarPrins et al. 2008; Reference Fajardo, Ammour and CruzFajardo, Ammour, and Cruz 2006; Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013). As in PRODEGA, that assessment engendered the preliminary decision to pursue the Gebhardian alternative.
Yet, preliminary model selection represented only the first step in a drawn-out process. Once they settled on the Gebhardian alternative, the developmental professionals moved on to implementation, a stage in which they encountered obstacles especially prominent in the 1990s. For one, the anti-Sandinista Liberal government authorities downplayed the overarching goal of building a “kingdom of equality” and questioned the desirability and economic viability of producer cooperatives (Reference EnríquezEnríquez 2000). More importantly, most of the prevalently anti-Sandinista ranchers in the region expressed reservations, notwithstanding both their Somoza-era cooperative experience and the cautious receptiveness to cooperative organization articulated by leading families in the area. That rejection was largely because the planned Gebhardian organizational form, advanced by aid agencies closely linked to the revolution, evoked the reviled specter of Sandinista collectivization campaigns among rank-and-file ranchers.Footnote 19
In this adverse context, ideology certainly fueled the developmental professionals’ transformative process. Indeed, motivated by their commitment to salvage some of the gains of the revolution and gradually improve the conditions of the more vulnerable members of society, the professionals and their agencies stubbornly persisted in their efforts (Reference Caldecott, Slujis, Aguilar and LounelaCaldecott et al. 2012). But that ideology also interacted with the professionals’ base of expert knowledge. In addition to offering an organizational repertoire and allowing them to assess the environmental fit of different models early on, expert knowledge served three complementary purposes during the implementation stage.
First, it bestowed prestige on the professionals, which was instrumental in overcoming opposition and laying the groundwork for the industrial transformation. Developmental professionals’ training and knowledge assuaged reticent ranchers’ concerns. In contrast to Sandinista authorities, viewed by ranchers as inexperienced novices or, worse, haughty enemies, the developmental professionals, who often chose to live in the area,Footnote 20 celebrated their business-oriented approach, offering both improved ranch performance (i.e., raw milk quantity and quality) and higher profits.
In addition, expert knowledge endowed the developmental professionals with a deep understanding of the different building blocks of the Gebhardian cooperative model. That understanding, which bolstered their prestige among ranchers, allowed them to deftly and swiftly introduce various modernizing practices and processes across the emerging cooperatives. It also provided them with significant flexibility in the enactment of the model, insofar as their deep knowledge reduced their reliance on standardized or rigid organizational blueprints.
Third, through their expertise—and especially their knowledge of the severe criticism leveled at the Sandinista revolutionary regime for its excessively authoritarian and anti-peasant approachFootnote 21—the developmental professionals understood the need to negotiate with local leaders. Those negotiations involved descriptions of the Gebhardian model, which usually emphasized its preservation of private land ownership, and required developmental professionals to remain open to model alterations that suited rancher expectations. In fact, in all cases, leading families gave their full support in exchange for significant concessions from developmental professionals. For instance, in contrast to the ideals favored by the professionals and their agencies, these powerful local families monopolized top positions in the newly formed cooperatives. They remained in those positions for decades, centralizing all decision-making (e.g., the Aragon family in San Francisco de Asís, the Fernandez family in Masiguito, and the Carranza and Lazo families in COOPROLECHE). Their continued control of these cooperatives partially undermined developmental professionals’ lofty egalitarian vision. But it also ensured that leading ranchers’ retained a vested interest in the Gebhardian cooperatives.
Likewise, soon after the creation of the Gebhardian cooperatives, leading families demanded that developmental professionals build the processing facilities. That “cart-before-the-horse” alternative of rapid movement into processing—likely motivated by ranchers’ sour experience of dependence on powerful buyers and merchants before and during the revolutionFootnote 22—countered developmental professionals’ plans. Those plans called for a gradual process of development focused first on improvement in ranches and milk collection networks, and only much later on a transition into processing. Yet, in all the studied Gebhardian cooperatives, the developmental professionals eventually conceded on this point.
PRODEGA’s implementation, which unfolded in three phases, offers an illustration of the combined role of developmental professional ideology, with its emphasis on gradual improvements through cross-class alliances and the prestige, knowledge, flexibility, and negotiating capacity afforded by their expertise. Early in Phase 1 (1990–1993), the developmental professionals demonstrated their flexibility, prestige, and negotiating capacity by engaging with, and obtaining the approval of, leading local families to create nine small and medium-sized Gebhardian cooperatives—all of them located in the departments of Boaco and Chontales. From the beginning, those leading families established themselves as leaders of the new cooperatives. For instance, in the San Francisco de Asís cooperative, “the presidency never changed. It’s always been Fernández, for a very long time.”Footnote 23
During this first phase, professionals followed their plan to raise ranch-level production and productivity. They established a generous extension service, introduced new cattle breeds through a genetic modification program, installed four raw milk cooling stations, built a road network of over 450 kilometers, and set up a transportation system (Reference EskolaEskola 2003; Reference Caldecott, Slujis, Aguilar and LounelaCaldecott et al. 2012; Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013). However, in response to demands of leading local ranchers, the professionals, exhibiting their flexibility and knowledge, also grudgingly supported the construction of the first cooperative cheese-processing plant (Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013).
That plant, initially built as a nonpasteurizing artisanal facility with funding from the World Food Program (WFP) but later upgraded by PRODEGA, was owned jointly by two of the PRODEGA cooperatives—Masiguito and San Francisco de Asís. It encouraged professionals and local ranchers to jointly devise a novel commercialization strategy that combined the sale of raw milk to large Managua-based dairy plants, with manufacturing of different cheeses (e.g., queso fresco, queso criollo) and other dairy products (e.g., sour cream, butter) for domestic and, later, Salvadorean consumption. This strategy proved remarkably successful, in part because Salvadorean demand for cheese was expanding rapidly at the time (Reference EskolaEskola 2003; Reference Caldecott, Slujis, Aguilar and LounelaCaldecott et al. 2012; Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013).
During PRODEGA Phases 2 (1994–1998) and 3 (1998–2003), the developmental professionals once again demonstrated their knowledge, negotiating capacity, and flexibility as they further upgraded the facilities at the original plant, by then managed independently by San Francisco de Asís. They also complied with rancher demands by building two more plants at the successful Masiguito and San Felipe cooperatives, all equipped with pasteurization, testing, processing, and refrigeration facilities. The professionals trained cooperative leaders on management and accounting procedures, and plant workers on production practices. They paired their capacity-building initiative with a “high road” human resource approach inspired by their social democratic ideology, which valued long-term contracts, constant skill upgrading, living wages, and benefits. During these later phases of the program, they also pursued their egalitarian goals by expanding activities of particular use for small, traditional, and isolated ranchers, such as diversified pastures, veterinary services, and an extension of the raw milk collection network (Reference EskolaEskola 2003; Reference Caldecott, Slujis, Aguilar and LounelaCaldecott et al. 2012; Reference Seppänen, Eriksson, Aguilar, Boman and PijnenburgSeppänen et al. 2013).
The same ideology and expertise shaped the developmental professional interventions as part of both Italy’s PRADC and Sweden’s FondeAgro. PRADC’s developmental professionals launched an initial consultation round in 1997, enlisting support from leading ranchers in Nueva Guinea. Building on that support, they created COOPROLECHE, constructed fourteen collection centers, and offered ranchers a variety of extension and technical services. As the long-serving president of COOPROLECHE explained, between 1998 and 2004, the program employed a veterinarian, two extension technicians, several economists, and specialists in raw milk management. Acquiescing to rancher demands, PRADC also hired Italian cheese production experts in the early 2000s to swiftly prepare the cooperative for its transition to manufacturing. Following their recommendations, the program built the cheese-processing plant between 2004 and 2006.Footnote 24
SIDA’s FondeAgro, for its part, pursued three phases that mirrored PRODEGA’s, and involved the same pattern of professional-rancher negotiation that elicited an accelerated transition into processing. In Phases 1 (2001–2003) and 2 (2004–2007), the professionals focused on organizing five cooperatives, building collection centers, offering extension services to raise productivity and raw milk quality, and broadening cooperative membership. But early on, ranchers also expressed an interest in building a processing plant, and by the mid-2000s they were vocally demanding its construction (Reference Prins, Junkin, Barriga, Orozco, Melo and AguilarPrins et al. 2008). As the president of Nicacentro, FondeAgro’s largest cooperative, recalled, ranchers felt it was time to “take decisive steps to set up the plant.”Footnote 25 In response, FondeAgro professionals began planning for the plant at the end of Phase 2. That plant, owned and managed by Nicacentro, was built at the community of Caño de Agua during Phase 3 (2008–2010), thereby completing the Gebhardian model.Footnote 26
Discussion and Conclusion
In accounting for a “high road” transformation in a Central Nicaraguan context devoid of widespread state or global buyer intervention, the proposed argument underscores the ideology and expert knowledge of a distinct institutional actor spearheading the process: the developmental professional of foreign aid agencies. The explanation shows how developmental professionals’ social democratic ideology and considerable expertise shaped both the selection of the new Gebhardian organizational model and its implementation. That model fell at the intersection of the organizational repertoire offered by developmental professionals’ expert knowledge with the guiding principles and cause-effect understandings of their ideology. It was selected largely on the basis of its ideological implications and resource demands. Indeed, FINNIDA, SIDA, and Italian Development Cooperation developmental professionals considered a variety of alternative models before settling on the Gebhardian approach—a choice far from inevitable in a region where, for example, Salvadorean family-owned processing corporations flourished, and nonprocessing cooperatives and associations supplied large buyers.
Furthermore, the Nicaraguan case also reveals that at the implementation stage, ideological motivations ensured continued support among developmental professionals and their agencies for the selected Gebhardian model, despite encountering local opposition. Likewise, their expert knowledge—which set them apart from, for instance, leaders of the Sandinista CASs of the 1980s—supplied the required skills to effectively enact the model’s different components, negotiate and collaborate with cooperative members and, in the process, gain their trust. Significantly, as the evidence collected and analyzed through process-tracing reveals, those negotiations involved not only imposition of the model but also concessions to leading families. That is why processing facilities were built ahead of schedule in these cooperatives and why powerful local families retained control of cooperative leadership positions for decades. Ideology and expert knowledge persisted as causal factors, but they interacted with each other, and with environmental conditions—most notably ranchers’ prerevolutionary collective experience—to shape the final outcome.
At the same time, the proposed argument, informed by a deviant case study design, also entails scope conditions that limit its generalizability. Indeed, because its outcome is not predicted or well explained by existing theories, a deviant case study like the one presented here is especially useful as a heuristic device to reveal previously ignored variables. It thus represents only a first step in theory development. As Levy (Reference Levy2008, 13) explains, “The examination of deviant cases is not the end of inquiry, as the theory refined on the basis of deviant case analysis must be subject to subsequent testing against new evidence, whether in either large N or small-N analysis, by applying the revised hypotheses to other cases.”
It is in this sense that the proposed argument provides the contours for an expanded new industrial policy and global value chain research agenda on industrial transformations. That expanded agenda calls for future scholarship to address the transformative role of ideology and expert knowledge in instances of industrial change. Certainly, other works have unearthed similar findings. For example, in Italy a number of studies documented the motivating role of communism among the small artisanal producers in the Italian region of Emilia Romagna, renowned for their remarkable clusters (Reference CriscuoloCriscuolo 2002; Reference Brusco, Pezzini, Pyke, Becattini and SengenbergerBrusco and Pezzini 1990). As Criscuolo (Reference Criscuolo2002, 36) argues, this communist ideology influenced the industry’s association, its firms and artisans in their “fight against the monopoly of big business,” their “idea that the competitive advantage of small businesses cannot rely on the exploitation of the workforce,” and their “preclusion for ideological reasons of a low-cost competitive strategy.” However, such studies, though compelling, remain scarce, and their conclusions are largely ignored in domestic and international models of development policy. The addition of new cases therefore promises to enhance our understanding of the studied variables and their consequences for the multiple paths toward industrial transformation available to late developers.