Wealth
Development

Economic Empowerment Project

Karo-Ojire Investment Limited is a "Pan Yoruba Co-operative Economic Revolution" TM for ownership and future employment for participants. To economically develop Yoruba race by eliminating absolute poverty through cooperative investment YIF has created a novel Economic Empowerment Project. The vision of this project is to establish the best trustworthy cooperative economic structure that will enrich stakeholders and create jobs for present and future Yoruba generations with self worth, minds free of corruption, greed and self-centeredness.


“Economic growth without social progress lets the great majority of people remain in poverty, while a privileged few reap the benefits of rising abundance.” John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) Thirty-fifth President of the USA.
Yoruba Cooperative Economy in which every investor shall be paid members of Yoruba Indigenes Foundation for ownership and future employment of participants and generations to come. The founder’s vision is to establish a formidable cooperative economic institution that will sustain Yoruba race for more than two thousand (2,000) years beyond his time with intent to equally carry along interested members of YIF. Let us fix our economy collectively without waiting for the government. This cooperative business venture will be responsive to Yoruba communities need as well as stimulate the race local economic growth. The race should see this form of cooperative business as an obvious choice to break free from the prevailing poverty syndrome.
This cooperative business idea with a huge numbers of investors investing N5,000.00 per student and N100,000.00 per adult members including their children will foster economic growth at Yoruba communities and regional levels for rural and urban development.
“In economics, hope and faith coexist with great scientific pretension and also a deep desire for respectability.” John Kenneth Galbraith (1908-2007) Canadian-American economist.
With debt free local economic venture ownership and control, and net gain distributed to those stake holders who use the cooperative for the progress of society, their names will never perish. The pattern, structure and objectives of this cooperative venture will compel participants to act defiantly in their respective communities than businesses with other organizational structures.
Furthermore, this cooperative venture will offer our race a way for us as a group of individuals to pool our limited resources together to achieve a critical mass economic progress. This process will not bring just progress but will also unit us as a race by putting our meager resources, and capital into larger, more viable and economically competitive units. Since direct government assistance for job opportunities and communities development have been shrinking drastically, we as a race must tap into potential for locally owned cooperative economic empowerment for alleviation of poverty to play a more vital and direct role in our rural and urban economic development scheme. Since this vision is as a result of call from the above, we as a people will use this cooperative economic pool of our people as a development tool and should use it to promote both social empowerment and economic goals.

What is cooperative economy?
Cooperative economy is organized economic service that is organized around the needs of its members, who own and control it through a democratically elected board. Benefits, assets, and liabilities distribution are based on individual investment shares and on use or patronage. International Alliance of Cooperatives (ICA) describes a co-op as “an autonomous, voluntary association meeting common economic, social, and cultural needs through a jointly owned and democratically controlled enterprise." Definition.
This Yoruba cooperative venture is organized to meet the common needs of our race as a group of people. We opted for its creation as a need to rectify social and economic stress as grass-roots response to market, infrastructure decadence and job imperfections. This cooperative structure is influenced by unpalatable economic situations in our regions based on Yoruba historical and cultural factors. We are determined to take the bull by the horns in fighting our common enemy; ‘poverty’.
KOI will subordinate the interests of its capital investor to those of the business user, and returns on capital shall be limited. Member patrons shall be the primary source of equity capital. KOI business ventures shall differ from other public business structures because its activities shall be operated on principles that encompass Yoruba race broader social or communities need, as well as business, concerns.
“Economy is too late when you are at the bottom of your purse.” (4 BC-65) Roman philosopher and playwright. Voluntary and Open Membership from YIF
Democratic Member Control
Member Economic Participation
Autonomy and Independence
Education, Training and Information
Concern for Community

In response to changing government and market conditions, our race will be experimenting cooperative economic principles that will better serve us. We shall use our closed membership to maximize efficiency, profitability and the return on member equity investments.