cooperative social responsibility report
Transcripción
cooperative social responsibility report
COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 36th SOCIAL AND FISCAL YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2013 BALANCE SOCIAL COOPERATIVO 36º ejercicio económico social al 30 de junio de 2013 Contents INDICE 5 7 8 9 12 BANCO CREDICOOP COOPERATIVO LIMITADO’S SOCIAL AND COOPERATIVE RESPONSIBILITY REPORT – LETTER OF PRESENTATION COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSABILITY REPORT AUDITED BY ICA AMERICAS ADMINISTRATION BOARD 13 14 STATUTORY AUDIT COMMITTEE 15 18 MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENTS 19 21 ABOUT THE COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 22 32 MANAGEMENT INTEGRAL MODEL AS THE GUARANTEE OF CONTINUITY FOR OUR COOPERATIVE PROJECT 33 38 OUR VISION ABOUT THE PLAN FOR A COOPERATIVE DECADE 39 47 COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY (RSCOOP) MEASURING PROCESS 48 50 IDENTIFYING DATA 51 54 MISSION, VISION, VALUES, CORPORATE PURPOSE AND STRATEGIC GOALS 55 62 PRODUCTS AND SERVICES 63 72 TERRITORY OF INFLUENCE COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 3 73 76 INSTITUTIONAL ORGANIZATION CHART 77 81 HIGHLIGHTS 82 85 QUALITY CERTIFICATION BANCO CREDICOOP 4 To the Members, The Board of Administration of Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado hereby submits to your consideration this Cooperative Social Responsibility Report (BSCoop, Spanish acronym) for the Fiscal Year starting July 1st, 2012 and ending June 30, 2013. As mentioned in the first report, it has been drawn up according to the terms and format proposed by the International Cooperative Alliance for the Americas (ICA Americas). Firstly, we deem it necessary to place main features of historic, economic, social and political context which distinguished the period under review in the various reality levels where we move with noticeable incidence over our cooperative management. The economic and financial crisis focused on core countries has questioned the predominant neo-liberal paradigm, by strongly fostering the search for social ways in which the solidarity and equity prevail as irreplaceable values. Consistent with this need, 2012 was declared by the United Nations (UN) as the “International Year of Cooperatives” under the slogan “Cooperatives enterprises build a better world”. In the second semester of that year, the International Cooperative Alliance –ICA– published its “Plan for a cooperative decade” and shortly after a set of countries formed by Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela and CICOPA Américas (1) submitted a document with the position of the Southern sub-region of ICA Americas as regards that initiative, a topic included in the development of this report. On the other hand, the Latin American integration process sustainability, through various multilateral bodies (Mercosur, Unasur, Celac, Alba, Caricom, etc.) which strengthen the positions of the region countries in the defense of economic growth and social progress, is stood out as a highly positive element in a world going through economic, social and (1) CICOPA Américas –International Organization of Industrial, Artisanal and Service Producers’ Cooperatives– http://www.cicopa.coop COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 5 political crisis at planetary level and tensions that threaten world peace. Within the framework of the mentioned external crisis, the Government has continued applying policies as regards economic and financial issues of countercyclical nature, which foster the employment and economic development with social equity; promote scientific and technological training; encourage the growth of internal market and economic complementation with region countries. In the financial field, the reform to the Charter of the Argentina’s Central Bank produced at the beginning of 2012 granted to the monetary authority a great power of regulation allowing, for instance, the creation of loan facility for productive investment, compulsory to all banks in the system, with longer terms and lower rates than those current in the market at that moment. By the end of June 2013, transactions in that facility had been settled for almost 35,000 million Argentine pesos, equivalent to 8.3% of private sector credits, thus highlighting that 56% out of that total was granted to SMEs. By the end of 2012, the Capital Market Act was passed. It contributes to settle a pending debt of our democracy, due to the fact that the previous law dates back to the year 1968. The new law seeks to reach different objectives, among which the following are stressed: to delete selfregulation; to reinforce the regulation and supervision capacity of the National State over capital markets; by consolidating the Comisión Nacional de Valores (CNV, Spanish acronym for National Securities Exchange Commission) as the single control body of the public tender;to promote the access to capital markets of SMEs, including the cooperatives and benefit societies, and toencourage the participation of small investors. In this significant achievement scenario, generally consistent with recognitions that we have sustained for decades from the Cooperative Movement, we consider that the continuous progress with measures already installed in the public debate and that would allow the consolidation of those conquered achievements is necessary. Among them, the following are highlighted: the need of a new Financial Services Act for the Economic and Social Development, intended to definitely revoke the dictatorship’s Financial Entities Act; a Foreign Investments Law which progresses to stronger regulations for foreign investments, changing the legal and regulatory documents currently in force in the country and that protects the foreign capitals in an extreme manner, setting tax rules that, among other things, enable to sustain policies of currency administration by the State; a deep reform to tax legislation, by designing a new fiscal system consistent with the production encouragement, intended to improve income distribution and wealth redistribution. A serious discussion should be encouraged over the Natural Resources issue that enables, firstly, to disassemble the exorbitant mechanism of tax exemptions the mining exploitations have and include the consideration of the surface mining problem, by seeking the balance between the BANCO CREDICOOP 6 environment and population defense and the logical sovereign exploitation of Natural Resources. OUR BANK We have passed through a new year of successful management, in which core goals as regards commercial, operational and services growth aspects, such as the institutional strengthening of our cooperative, democratic and participative structure proposed at the beginning of the year were reached. On June 24, 2013, after a more-than-four-year debate in which all the Entity’s Management instances, from Members’ Committees, Zonal Advisory Committees, Management Departments and Departments of the Head Office to the Administration Board itself took part, the final wording of the document “Management Integral Model - To guarantee the continuity of our cooperative project” was approved. Thus, we closed another stage of the ambitious process that we faced up some years ago to turn into a value, in the whole organization, the concept of management integrity, which intends to harmoniously articulate commercial, administrative and institutional logics that coexist in the cooperative management, guaranteeing at the same time their joining without concessions to cooperation principles and values and to our vision of how to put them into practice. Throughout this report, we account for the achievements and we reiterate our aspiration regarding the fact that this report be another tool for the display of our management, which has been conceived in an integral way and that, in the hands of our leaders, officers and employees, transcends the formal dimension and serves as a training, research, communication and re-creation tool of our ways of intervention in the organizational and social reality. Mr. Melchor Cortés Secretary Mr. Carlos Heller President COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 7 COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT AUDITED BY ICA AMERICAS CADIC (Spanish acronym for Centro de Acción, Desarrollo e Investigación en Cooperativas y Mutuales [Action, Development and Research on Cooperatives and Benefit societies Center]): Lic. Liliana González - Social Auditor ICA AMERICAS Lic. Juan Carlos San Bartolomé - Social Auditor ICA AMERICAS Internal Responsible Persons Team: Mr. Melchor Cortés Mr. Reynaldo Pettinari Mr. Alfredo T. García Mrs. Ángela Carulli Mr. José Luis Lago This Cooperative Social Responsibility Report follows the general guidelines set by the International Cooperative Alliance (ICA) Americas, performing an integral adaptation to Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado’s reality and features. BANCO CREDICOOP 8 Administration Board 2012/2013 CONSEJO DE ADMINISTRACIÓN 2012 - 2013 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President Carlos Heller 1st Vice-President Ricardo Sapei 2nd Vice-President Horacio J. Giura Secretary Melchor Cortés 1st Pro-Secretary Basilio Chalak 2nd Pro-Secretary Horacio Raffo Quintana Treasurer Raúl Guelman (te) 1st Pro-Treasurer Carlos Louzán 2nd Pro-Treasurer Néstor Callegari BANCO CREDICOOP 10 Secretary for Cooperative Education Reynaldo Pettinari Permanent Members Eduardo Temkin Nelson Pesci Ricardo Carrera Eduardo Llorente (te) Juan Nefa Guillermo Mac Kenzie Miguel Ángel Ruiz Miguel Ángel Fabbro (te) Salvador Ariel Tobías Scheinin Roberto Pasquali Daniel Tonso (te) Dante Pellegrini (te) Marcelo De Lorenzi Aldo Raffaeli Silvio Pettinari Oscar Barbieri Miguel Á. Ercoli Gustavo Casciotti (te) Santiago Navone Edgardo Bozzolo Miriam Carbone Roberto Mandrino (te) Luis María Carrieri (te) Juan J. Pintos Daniel Frascarelli (te) Vicente Barros Rafael Massimo Ángel Gómez (te) M. Graciela Romanelli Sebastián Deza (te) Víctor Janjetic Claudio Guzmán Raúl Aprea (te) Héctor Messina (te) Alejandro Samek Marta Sitlonik (te) Omar Mora Silvia Schwarzman Deputy Members Mario Martini Graciela Bisaro Gustavo Monti Pablo Padín (te) Alberto Stagnitti José Affronti Carlos Di Fabio Juan Celli Horacio Raffin (te) Jorge O. Muriel Norberto Amengual Leandro Habichayn Gabriel Rinaudo (r) José Cirilo (te) Alicia Scarpeccio (te) Eduardo Vera Miguel Olivera Luis Rinaldi Ángel Moscoloni Héctor Meloni Luis Cárdenas (te) Víctor Peverelli Roberto Russo Jorge Lepori Juan Durán (te) Mario Cauzillo (te) Gloria Lafita Rubén Bernocco (te) Jorge Pancaro (te) Néstor Audisio Juan Giuttari Graciela Bonsignore Oscar Carvajal (te) Gustavo Galetti Elsa Mareque (te) Pablo Levinton Diego Volman Marcelo Mul Alicia Maturano Raúl Klein (te) Fernando Coringrato Daniel Giannini (te) José Olivo Juan Pacheco Enrique Wlach Jorge Barrios COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 11 Abelardo Cancela (te) Norberto Diaz Fernando Peralta (r) (te) Term of office expires (r) Resigns BANCO CREDICOOP 12 Statutory Audit Committee 2012/2013 COMISIÓN FISCALIZADORA 2012 - 2013 Permanent Statutory Auditors Jorge Lorenzo (te) Raúl González (te) Nelson Cativiela (te) Deputy Statutory Auditors Ricardo Gil (te) David Eizykovicz (te) Celso Boyero (te) (te) Term of office expires BANCO CREDICOOP 14 Management Departments GERENCIAS MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENTS General Manager Gerardo Galmés Attached to the President’s Office Juan Carlos Junio Deputy General Management Sergio Clur Deputy General Management in Branches Affairs Gustavo Nagel Legal Advisory Carlos Cohen Human Resources Advisory Ángel Petriella Economic Financial Advisory Alfredo T. García Attached to the Deputy General Management Néstor Wassaf Institutional Relations Management Department Attached to the Deputy General Management in Branches Affairs Juan Carlos Picchio Regional Management Departments Alberto Borzel Juan Carlos Rivera Adriana Aspis Fernando Diminutto Ángel Saud General Accountant Víctor Sara Legal Affairs Management Department María Aída Nejamkis Audit Management Department Claudio Falbo Corporate Banking Management Department José Luis Romani Retail Banking Management Department Nelson Pereira Alternative Channels Management Department Eduardo Geraghty Communications Management Department Gabriel Travella BANCO CREDICOOP 16 Commercial Strategy Management Department Ángela Carulli Foreign Management Department Horacio Nogueira Finance Management Department Gloria Prusak Computer Science Management Department Pablo Recepter Credit Transactions Management Department Claudia Córdoba de Dyki Strategic Planning and Management Control Department José Luis Lago Processing Management Department Eduardo Roitman Recovery of Loans Management Department Liliana Ostrovsky Human Resources Management Department Horacio Aizicovich Zonal Operative Responsible Officers Management Department Marta Schnizer de Caraballo Credit Risk Management Department José Caruso Administrative Services Management Department Roberto Nogueira Computer Systems Management Department Carlos Murat COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 17 Technology Management Department Ricardo Soto Operative Management Department Horacio Kisilevsky Organization and Processes Advisory Gastón Mostaccio BANCO CREDICOOP 18 About the Cooperative Social Responsibility Report ACERCA DEL BALANCE SOCIAL COOPERATIVO This is the second Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado’s Cooperative Social Responsibility Report corresponding to the Fiscal Year No. 36 ended June 30, 2013. From the Social Audit, we remind the reader that the first Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado’s Cooperative Social Responsibility Report has received the Quality Certification in Cooperative Social Responsibility Report, granted by the International Cooperative Alliance for the Americas as a consequence of putting its report in the frame of the proposal for measuring the Universal Cooperative Principles and due to the results of the assessment of its actions under the terms of such principles, respecting the Cooperative Social Responsibility Concept. As we have explained in the first report, we remind that the Cooperative Social Responsibility Report (BSCoop) is: An instrument aimed at measuring the impact of the solidarity institution on the community; An assessment of the management which states a balance between social benefits and businesses success; A strategic tool for the systematic assessment of the Cooperative Principles compliance; A communication tool.(2) The compliance with Cooperative Principles is taken into consideration in the search for: Measuring the social impact of the Cooperative Social Responsibility (RSCoop) of Banco Credicoop Coop. Ltdo. on the social actors and interest groups. Delving into the Cooperative Social Responsibility practices of the leadership and staff; (2) González, Liliana and San Bartolomé, Juan Carlos: “Cooperative Social Responsibility Report: A construction under construction. Ethics, commitment and transparency in the cooperative management”, Ed. Red Gráfica. 2008, page 34 BANCO CREDICOOP 20 Having an influence on the interest groups in the sense of creating a propitious environment for the Social Economy; Producing information tending towards the solidarity education in communities; Making the Argentine cooperative movement sensitive to the Cooperative Social Responsibility measuring.(3) In short, at committing to this assessment, Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado, enables to: Reaffirm its strong cooperative identity; Provide objective data for the political defense of the movement; Influence on the public policies. In order to give a context to the readers of this Cooperative Social Responsibility Report, we state that the weighting work of compliance with the Cooperative Principles is made in two stages: Upon the end of the analysis and the evaluation of each Cooperative Principle; In the Final Report, where prominent aspects arising from the analysis and mainstreaming of all Cooperative Principles are highlighted. (3) González, Liliana and San Bartolomé, Juan Carlos: “Cooperative Social Responsibility Report: A construction under construction. Ethics, commitment and transparency in the cooperative management”, Ed. Red Gráfica. 2008, page 34 COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 21 Management Integral Model as the Guarantee of Continuity for Our Cooperative Project MODELO INTEGRAL DE GESTIÓN COMO GARANTÍA DE CONTINUIDAD DE NUESTRO PROYECTO COOPERATIVO The Administration Board of Banco Credicoop Coop. Ltdo., in its meeting held on 06.24.2013, approved the document “Management Integral Model”, whose complete wording is published in a section of this BSCoop. In this section, the presentations given on the matter during the Administration Board meeting by Messrs. Melchor Cortés and Carlos Heller, Secretary and President of Banco Credicoop Coop. Ltdo., respectively, are transcribed. Likewise, in a third item, the document structure is included. MANAGEMENT INTEGRAL MODEL PRESENTATION TO THE ADMINISTRATION BOARD BY MR. MELCHOR CORTÉS, SECRETARY OF BANCO CREDICOOP COOP. LTDO. (JUNE 24, 2013) A COLLECTIVE CONSTRUCTION PROCESS We submit to the consideration of the Bank’s Administration Board the final version of the Management Integral Model, which arises from a process of preparation, debate, contributions and synthesis taking place in all Bank’s leadership levels. Thus, we are closing a stage of an ambitious process that we faced up some years ago to turn into a value, in the whole organization, the concept of Management Integral Model. The extension and depth the debate on the Base Document II reached in the whole organization states a high level of understanding and acceptance as regards the challenge we decided when a cascade process through which the discussion about the Document would be carried out was posed. The number of remarks and proposals obtained shows an increasing commitment of every level of leadership and participation of our entity with the core ideas as set out. That is the reason why we want to summarize some data about the development of the collective construction process of the Document which we resolve to consider today. During the General Meeting in 2004, our president Carlos Heller COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 23 formulated the concept of Management Integral Model, complementing it with that of the full and pertinent participation. Since then, we have assumed the challenge of putting this concept into practice. In March 2009, the Institutional Strengthening Committee was created, with four work axis, one of which was the Management Integral Model. By the end of that year, the creation of a document which would summarize the experience gained and would propose how to continue with the Model development was faced up. Between April and September 2010, a first wording was examined, corrected and enriched by the Board of Directors and the Executive and Institutional Strengthening Committees giving rise to eight different versions, which point out the productive work made in that first version, in that first attempt of writing. Afterwards, the work document was discussed in the core of a workshop held on October 25, 2010, in which four regional members of the Administration Board, four presidents of members’ committees, four zonal managers and four Branch’s managers appointed to such effect participated. As a result of such, a new version was drawn up in November 2010. In April 2011, a chapter related to the Management Integral Model in the Head Office was added to the Document, created by a group of leaders and officers thereof, appointed to such effect by the Institutional Strengthening Committee. After several reformulations, on the 1st day of August, the work Document was sent to the Board of Directors for treatment. And, on September 26, 2011, that work was presented at the Administration Board meeting, where it was resolved the promotion of its spreading and debate in all the Bank’s management spheres. A threephase or -stage process was designed which, beginning from higher leadership levels, ends at the Branches and Head office areas scope and, from that on, resulting opinions and proposals were received. The first phase included workshops in the Administration Board and Zonal Management Departments and Management Departments. A workshop was carried out in November 2011, in which permanent and deputy members of the Administration Board and responsible persons for regional cooperative education participated, with a total of 74 leaders. In December, two workshops were developed with departmental managers, with 27 officers in attendance. And the same month of December, a workshop of zonal managers was developed with 26 officers. In the second phase, a series of workshops in zones and with departmental officers of the Head Office took place between March and April 2012, in which 1.049 thousand leaders, 1.216 thousand employees participated; i.e., 2.265 thousand people, in a total of 59 workshops. During the following phase, these activities were replicated in Branches and in the Head Office management departments led by those who had participated in the round of zonal workshops; here a total of 274 workshops were developed, with a total of 5.134 thousand attendees. BANCO CREDICOOP 24 Since the termination of that series of workshops, the Institutional Strengthening Committee was in charge of its follow-up to ensure that all the participating instances send its conclusions, either from Branches, Zones, Management Departments or Departments of the Head Office. All the reports had to be summarized and grouped by topics. As a result, thirty seven proposals with specific changes to the wording, pointing out supresions, additions or modifications to the original wording; 20 general amendements indicating concepts to be added or developed more in detail; 24 action proposals at the whole Bank’s level, by suggesting general application measures in several areas such as Human Resources, Institutional Running, Training, Communications and others; 18 action proposals at the Branches and zones level, related to the development of tasks in the zones and members’ committees; and 19 action proposals at the Head Office level that, as in the previous case, refer to measures to be implemented in different management environments to put in depth the Model application, arose. Consistent with the democratic and open nature with which workshops were fostered, all contributions produced were received, those resulting from collective debates at Branches and then formulated in answers per zones, as well as the preparations of three- or four-participant groups of a workshop, and including individual opinions. Apart from the proposals added to the Document, an important variety of opinions on certain topics related to the management, which will be taken into account and timely studied in depth in the pertinent spheres, were observed. As from that, the Committee focused on the re-creation of the Document and by mid of June was dealt with by the Board of Directors, which added some modifications. That version was sent to the members of the Administration Board and this is what we currently submit to consideration. PRESENTATION BY MR. CARLOS HELLER, PRESIDENT OF BANCO CREDICOOP COOP. LTDO. THE MANAGEMENT INTEGRAL MODEL: A TOOL FOR FACING UP THE NEW CHALLENGES WE HAVE AHEAD I believe that the introduction by Melchor Cortés has the richness of showing the deep, intense process of the participative debate that all the organization carried out as a whole, and that ends with the treatment that today we give at the Administration Board. This is a process that we have followed together, which has had milestones and that, as we explained from the beginning, it was not thought in a hurry, since it should be something likely to be effectively thought in depth, ponderated, so that what we were approving really turns out to be everyone’s. This has been a feature all along our life; definitely, everything we have achieved, we firstly achieved it by convincing ourselves and then, by convincing others. Because, in general, COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 25 one cannot convince others of what oneself is not convinced. Therefore, the achievement of the self-conviction is the key of everything we have made in our life and what has enabled us to go through all these years. Only to think about it, the last great crisis prior to the start of the current process might be remembered; I talk about the 2001’s crisis and about our decision at that moment. Others changed and we organized meetings, we placed signs telling people to come to talk, making people feel the problem is common with their pairs, telling them to discuss. And I believe that the ceremony held in Parque Norte for launching the plan called “Credicoop y la Comunidad” [Credicoop and the Community] was quite a definition.That is to say: the society was angry and had reasons for being angry and we knew that we were not guilty. We had the complete conviction that we were not guilty because we had denounced what was happening, always in this difficult matter of administrating, under the rules with which we do not agree. How many times we said that? We have to comply, we have to make this right even though we do not agree, and we have to fight so that it changes. Therefore, we have shown, all along our life, that we are able to construe each reality, to assimilate it and, from there, to think on how to proceed. I believe that, in this last stage, new challenges has been brought up and for that reason I believe that what we are doing has a total relevance. We were born in the resistance, in the self-defense, in the action to defend, so that we were not wiped out ever since the cooperative movement exists. And the external threat was always an enormous clustering, strengthening and, even an overcoming-of-differences factor. Nowadays, the situation has changed: we do not have an external threat. That is to say that today we are one of the greatest financial institutions in Argentina. We are accepted, recognized and we have great prestige. The truth is that, without false modesty, I believe that what we have done is fantastic, as we have said in several times. When you look back and see everything we have been through, where we come from, the things we have overcome. However, as it happens in other aspects of life, it is not the same being told about something than having lived it. This is the great challenge that we have ahead. How to maintain, without the external threat, the same mystic, the same connection, the same commitment? And I believe that we were doing things, changing the way of administering. When we decided to change and create the zonal committees, some people believed that it was going to be a limit to participation and we said “no, this is for greater participation.” Because participation does not happen in a meeting, the greatest participation center is the Members’ Committee. That is the core of our life and our reason for living because this is the surface of contact with users. The key of our organization’s strength and the capacity of maintaining and reinforcing the link resides in the richness and fullness of the Members’ Committees operation. We went through different stages. We went through almost-absolute- BANCO CREDICOOP 26 centralization stages because we had to build a model. The pathway we went accross, firstly to merge a set of credit cooperative institutions, and then to add a group of other cooperative banks and to go creating a single management model, is quite difficult, and principally in those times when it had to be made, and with all those challenges with which we found. A necessary pathway of centralizing roles had to be passed through to ensure ourselves that things would be made in a certain manner. And, while the organization was acquiring that common identity, we have been going through the opposite pathway, by creating mechanisms to enable the greater decentralization possible within a single entity and, therefore, not having a degree of centralization is impossible, but trying to transfer to the Members’ Committees the greater room possible in the management. Also, we were adding changes to administrative structure. The Zonal Managers’ roles were changed. The positions of Regional Operative Responsible officers (ROZ, Spanish acronym) were created for them to focus on administrative and operative issues, so that zonal managers might have greater dedication to commercial and institutional issues. Due to the fact that there are a certain time and a lot of tasks to perform in Branches and if there are more tasks than those which can be done, some of them are not to be done or are not to be done in full. Thereafter, the Institutional Plan appeared, which was added to the Commercial Plan with which we were already working. Self-control and Follow-up Committees were created in Branches to generate the compliance culture, because we have plans, we developed a whole debate process, all in a planning process, but then we must ensure that it does not stay merely in writing, that it is something which is effectively fulfilled. And finally, we began to talk about the Management Integral Model. What is the Management Integral Model? An approach to the roles of the leaders who spend part of their time doing something in which they believe, something for which they are called to, something they do according to their thought, with the roles of professionals hired for that task and do it with conviction. Integrity comes from the member of the Board who participates in the enterprise management and from the officer who actively participates in the institutional life. That is the center, the concept, the core, the idea of integrity. That is to say, a group of women and men that, by playing different roles, face up the integrity sense and progress towards the idea that the commercial and institutional aspects go together; that there are not leaders focused on institutional aspects and others focused on commercial aspects. Of course, there are certain special features, personalities, vocations that determine the activity of each one. Then, we are in this stage and we have to imagine the Management Integral Model as our tool to face up new challenges we have ahead. Today, we are confronting with a totally competitive financial system which spends fortunes in advertising campaigns, a lot of them illusory but with great effect, that can be supported because they collect COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 27 exorbitant prices for the products and services they provide, i.e. that, in the end, all of that is paid by users; we also know that such situation takes part of some of system’s wickedness. The real thing is that this places us in front of a new challenge. How do we do to continue gaining market share, to go on growing? We do not want to grow to obtain the greatest possible earning; we want to grow to reach more people, to have more cooperatives, to expand our ideas, to have greater penetration over the virtues of our model. There is where this under treatment appears to all its extent. Our competitive and comparative advantage is in the Management Integral Model, in our capacity of relationship with people, institutions and members. That is to say, that we really move forward towards this idea that the cooperative belongs to the members and that who choose the cooperative as their financial entity are a part of it, feel themselves as part of it, may have access to its dimension, that is open, and may participate in its activities. All of this is what we are posing, even as a great commercial tool, if we wish to call this in such a way. Because our commercial advantage is our commitment of institutional model. That makes us different. Our checks, deposit slips and technology have the same size as the foreign banks’s. The difference is not there. Our model’s authenticity is the great difference we have in our favor. We are what we say we are. Now, we have to convince others because the fact that we are convinced is not enough. That day of the Centro Cultural de la Cooperación opening in the street, Floreal Gorini said “Another world is possible if people wish so”. In that simple phrase, he enclosed all a great definition of what it is about, because unfortunately many times people act against their own interests, because they are reached by other ideas, because they are influenced with ideas which are against particular interests. We have a great opportunity; we have developed a formidable tool. We are present in nearly all the country. This management model, which we are permanently improving, was started up. This allows us to widen our contact surface. And today we are taking this step, which summarizes that experience obtained in all these years. I had the happiness and honor of saying some things in the United Nations which is related to this. I comment two paragraphs of that participation. I said: “The cooperative enterprise as a contribution to a better world” is the slogan of this activity. It means, to the best of our knowledge that we do not think of the cooperative as the spare tire to amend the failures or mistakes of the capitalist system. To us, it means thinking the users and the workers in charge of the administration and the management prosecuting the provision of services processes, i.e. the Management Integral Model; this is what we are saying here. Production processes, through which the objective stops being that of attaining the highest profit possible and becomes that of rendering the best service possible. BANCO CREDICOOP 28 The service that effectively satisfies the needs of users, consumers, and where profitability be the needed to continue rendering the service, to capitalize, to fulfill the technology revolution goals, and all the challenges these times bring up. In an attempt to show the continuity of our thoughts, I marked three or four paragraphs of the document, which is very rich and you will agree with me, which I believe they summarize that thought. For instance, when we define the Management Integral Model, the paragraph says: The formulation of a new management model begins with the consideration of the fact that the historical practice had generated a work division by which leaders were in charge of the politicalinstitutional dimension, and the personnel was in charge of administrative-commercial dimension. This position had to be reviewed, in line with current objectives, by making leaders be more involved in the management of entrepreneurial aspects, and making officers and employees be more committed to political-institutional aspects of our bank. We expect that the Management Integral Model is the dominant cultural feature of the Cooperative. The integrity entails the overcoming of a dual vision as regards the operation of the cooperative and the achievement of a balanced coexistence of two logics exisingt in an objective way, such as the institutional and corporate ones. Those logics exist, they cannot be avoided; the issue here is that we permanently work in order to make those two logics work in a common space and complement each other, not confront each other. Another paragraph states that: “The full and pertinent participation is possible if our leaders, officers and employees take an effective part in a responsible way in the management of the cooperative enterprise, assuming that their personal growth is possible only if they acquire an upgrading sense as a part of the collective growth.” The full and pertinent participation has a sense if it is effective and not formal. We must overcome all formalities that still continue in our organization. And they continue because it is easier, faster, more comfortable, and we must not pose this as a fight or a confrontation; we must bring up this as a dynamic and permanent growth which enables us to take another small step in the construction of such integrity which is the end of formality. When we see, for instance, in my place, in the Credit Agreements Committee, a leader giving his opinion properly about credits of large enterprises, based on knowledge, as any other officer, I say: that is the integrity, the training school which enables people who were not lucky enough to receive professional education, to learn from managing how to COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 29 lead an enterprise of such a magnitude as this entity is and that he/she may do it at an equality level, earns other people’s respect and has an opinion as qualified as the most expert person. That is the Management Integral Model, that is what we have been building along these years, which is not a plain, simple, mechanic or automatic task. It has ups and downs, and slopes. Because all collective processes are that complex; but if you have a clear vision of where you go and which is the goal, that process will be better each time, will have better results and will be more valuable each time and we will continue training leaders capable of leading enterprises like this one; one of the greatest financial enterprises of the Argentine Republic, one of the enterprises that hires more personnel, and which is led by a group of working people, with different backgrounds, from different latitudes, and by a group of officers who has also received this culture and who developed within the same philosophy and that are pooled each time more. The key of our success and of what the Management Integral Model means lies there. Afterwards, the document states as follows: Organizations, as well as individuals, are not what they state to be, but they are what they do –i.e. there may be not dissociation between words and facts–. The Management Integral Model summarized our historic concept which puts forward that participative democracy and efficiency are not contrary, thus enabling us to strengthen and take advantage of our double nature of enterprise and social movement. We must fight against many things. For long time, some of us confronted even against who believed that our entity sense with deep social commitment led us to not being able to be efficient in the management. Something we understood from the beginning is that the dividing line went through the responsibility. We were administrators of someone else’s belongings and we must do it right. Our solidarity was our commitment to developing a different financial model, which does not aim at the geographical concentration or the business concentration, which really makes democratic the access to financing but with the responsibility of a good administrator. Surely they are things hard to be achieved, this is all about. And I believe we develop an expertise which shows that it is possible. Nothing less than that. In United Nations, I rejected the title of my participation, “small is beautiful”, because we are reduced with that idea: “the cooperative is likeable but it is a small thing”. And we say “no”. The cooperative may be the solution to the contradiction the world has not settled yet. In the confrontation between capitalism and socialism, capitalism achieved a temporary victory that seemed to be the end of the story, but it may not be the end of the story because capitalism is intrinsically unfair. Then a society model based on other values must be built, and the cooperation is the key; the necessary profitability, the integrity in the democratic participation, the profitability so that projects are viable as regards BANCO CREDICOOP 30 service as final objective and not as the highest profit. This is a beautiful dream. And we have showed, in scale, that this is possible. And that is what we have to continue doing. And what we are doing now is a step ahead in the same direction. We must assume and actively collaborate so that each member of the organization has a strong commitment to these concepts and assumes them as values. They are values we have settled. We must achieve that the Management Integral Model be the dominant cultural feature of our cooperative. And that the example, the education and the information flow orderly and consistently. The document states: Let’s review our daily actions under this perspective. And let’s modify everything that, within every one’s role, is possible to be modified. So as not to leave the speech in the theoretical field, some orientations related to practices with which we all agreed but that they require to be developed in everyone’s daily actions and each level of our cooperative are necessary. Nobody is going to say that he/she disagrees; the question is that we must put it into practice. And ten items are listed: 1. Complying with the meetings scheduled as ruled and agreed upon in our organization. 2. Making that each type of meeting as established be the field where the decisions made at the highest level are informed, planned, enriched; where the things each one must do be decided and shared, what each one has done be evaluated and shared, and methods and directions be corrected. 3. Encouraging a positive organizational environment, considering each problem as an opportunity for continuous improvement. 4. Stimulating the training and self-training, recognizing that the results of what have been received from the organization deposit in the workplace and that such process requires to be led by each supervision level. 5. Explaining what we expect from each one and providing support and confidence for their achievement. 6. Promoting the management integrity, by encouraging the complementary valuation of all dimensions of our activity: the institutional, commercial, administrative and operational ones. None of them is possible without the other ones –all of them are essential and necessary, because if we do not have a good administration and good operational systems and so on, we are not going to perform a good commercial management and all our policy is going to seem formal and discursive–. 7. Assuming the incorporation of new members of the entity with enthusiasm and providing them with all the necessary to convince them COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 31 with our ideals –key issue– so that this has the continuity that it must have. It has to generate the leaders who will go incorporating naturally and for that reason, we must open doors and review in each place, if the methods we have are not expulsive or difficult for new members; if we have the best practices so that who really wishes to incorporate may do so. 8. Making that the necessary discipline that every organization requires be, in our case, the result of conscious responsibility and commitment. 9. Feeling and expressing satisfaction for results when we succeed, and recognizing them -sometimes it makes us difficult to be happy with which we have achieved and to feel and enjoy it, and to know to demand and demand ourselves according to the needs and challenges that, at each moment, the organization sets out. 10. Promoting solidarity as a value in the work culture of our cooperative. Up to here, this is what I wanted to transmit. I believe, in some way, I was able to summarize the cores of the content of this very rich debate that the whole organization has carried out and that ends with the treatment that today we are giving in this Administration Board. DOCUMENT STRUCTURE As a summary of the different topics dealt with therein, the Chapters included in such Document are listed below: Chapter 1 The Management Integral Model as the guarantee of continuity for our cooperative project. Historical challenges of the Credit Cooperativism The reform of Bylaws The 2001’s crisis A new global perspective: the Base Document (2002 /2003) The Management Integral Model Chapter 2 Notes for debate: Application of the Management Integral Model. A. -Processes and participative dynamics in daily management B. -Officers and employees’ participation in the Management Integral Model C. -Leaders’ participation in the Management Integral Model -Members’ Committee - Operational Rules -Meetings of the Committee D. The Management Integral Model in the Head Office -Guidelines to deepen the implementation of the Management Integral Model in the Head Office areas Summary and conclusion BANCO CREDICOOP 32 Our Vision about the Plan for a Cooperative Decade Nuestra Visión acerca del Plan para una Década Cooperativa According to what the ICA Americas states in its website(1) when it refers to the Plan for a Cooperative Decade project: “The International Cooperative Alliance (ICA) outlined an ambitious strategy intended to turn cooperatives into the entrepreneurial model of greater growth for the end of this decade.” With that purpose, the ICA formed a Work Group of Planning that entrusted Cliff Mills and Will Davies, from the Centre for Mutual and Employee-owned Business belonging to the Oxford University, with the writing of a Plan for a Cooperative Decade project based on the Vision 2020, whose objective is to achieve that in the year 2020 the cooperative entrepreneurial model has been consolidated as: The recognized leader of the economic, social and environmental sustainability; The model preferred by people; The type of entrepreneurial organization of faster growth. The proposal sustains that “The Challenge of the vision 2020 aspires to be developed based on the International Year of Cooperatives achievements and the resilience showed by the cooperative movement since the financial crisis.” It warns that “these are significant achievements but they must be seen in the context of the main emerging trends probably setting up our policies, our societies and economies in the near future.” And it points out that “some of the more crucial global trends are: The environmental degradation and the exhaustion of resources; The instability of the financial sector; Some increasing inequalities; The increasing gap in the global management; A young generation apparently with little commitment; (1) http://www.aciamericas.coop/Plan-para-una-Decada-Cooperativa BANCO CREDICOOP 34 A loss of trust in political and economical organizations.” Before such scenario, the project states that “The cooperatives already contribute significantly to relieve those urgent global problems. However, with a proper support and greater understanding and recognition, they might contribute even more”. Based on that context features, the project formulates the general working plan for the ICA, for its members and for the cooperative sector in general, summarized in the following objectives: To increase the participation of members and governance to a new level; To place cooperatives as builders of sustainability; To consolidate the cooperative message and to define the identity of cooperatives; To ensure judicial frameworks which support the cooperatives’ growth; To get reliable capital for cooperatives while the management is guaranteed by members. Afterwards, the Document brings up some possible actions: To value the assignment of the domain “.coop”; To guarantee the presence of cooperatives’ voice in the global debate; To create a common symbol; To have a speech which reflects the differences with other ways of entrepreneurial organization; To develop TRAINING programs for future cooperatives’ leaders; To get cooperatives identified with both PARTICIPATION and SUSTAINABILITY. The authors highlight in their resumes that they are specialized in theories of property, history and application of neo-liberal policies and the role of economic experts in public policies. We may say that the start point is complicated. Based on precedent summary, prominent differences of concept may be observed between the ICA’s perspective and our vision and practice of cooperativism as entrepreneurial management tool and at the same time, as a social transformation tool. The Plan for a Cooperative Decade has as an undeniable merit, the offer of a space and time to exchange perspectives over cooperativism features or social movement. In line with this, Edgardo Form -IMFC Managervalues the history of the ICA, poses the complexity of leading an ecumenical organization gone through by tensions and defines the idea that the official document brings up a margin for the action of our countries. On our part, the criticism is not formulated from an external position but from recognizing ourselves as a part of the ICA, as an expression of a strong current in Latin America that fosters positions of emancipating inspiration, with practices and speeches consistent with the solidary ideas of our Social Movement. In any case, we express, from the inside and as a part of, the aspects of our perspective as long as we assume COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 35 ourselves as transforming cooperativism. We notice two relevant issues. Firstly, a somewhat technocratic perspective is reaffirmed to the extent that a declaration -which is centrally doctrinaire- is requested to the Centre for Mutual and Employee-owned Business, an institution of the Oxford University. This definition sets aside the principal actors of the cooperative movement that should assume its own word. There is a second significant element: the working group excludes a Latin America representation. If, on the other hand, we revise the bibliography used in the text, the Eurocentric orientation of its authors is evidenced. In order to mark presence and provide their vision, a group of representatives of the Southern Sub-region of ICA Americas, formed by Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela drew up along with CICOPA Américas(2) an own document entitled “Posición de la Subregión Sur de la Alianza Cooperativa Internacional” [Position of the International Cooperative Alliance, Southern Sub-region]. The debate process started some months before, based on the draft that the ICA launched. The Southern Sub-region document arises from the work cooperatives’ perspective of CICOPA Mercosur, met in September in Porto Alegre, Brazil, which created a paper as a first answer to the “Plan para una Década Cooperativa” [Plan for a Cooperative Decade] project. Afterwards, members of ICA in Argentina and CICOPA met in Cooperar to debate on that work and finalize with the writing. From all the countries forming the Southern Sub-region, only Argentina submitted a document which did not receive the consensus from ICA Americas, but it could be submitted before the Worldwide ICA Board in Manchester through CICOPA International, and although it was not included in the final document, it took part of a public debate before who wrote the Plan prepared by the Oxford University. Different visions coexist in the cooperativism sphere about contents, methods and ways of translating the cooperative values and principles into actions. And, in that framework, our particular way of understanding and being a solidarity-based entity includes the challenge of strengthening the social movement unity. We assume ourselves as a collective project with an extensive history of constructions that are revealed in Banco Credicoop as well as in the IMFC. The UN called, in October 2011, the President of Banco Credicoop, Carlos Heller, for the International Year of Cooperatives launch. His participation allowed expressing our positions as Latin American supporters of cooperativism, in line with the criticisms that today the Southern Sub-region of ICA Americas formulates to the Worldwide ICA Plan. On October 31, 2011, Heller said at the United Nations that the statement ‘The Cooperative Enterprise as a contribution to the construction of a better world’ was not synonym for turning the solidary (2) CICOPA Americas -International Organization of Industrial, Artisanal and Service Producers’ Cooperatives - http://www.cicopa.coop BANCO CREDICOOP 36 movement into the spare tire of an essentially unfair system. He stated that the cooperativism substantially defies the logic of profit because “to us, it means thinking the users, the workers in charge of the administration and the management prosecuting the provision of services, production processes, through which the objective stops being that of attaining the highest profit as possible and becomes that of rendering the best service as possible.” In a clear definition contrary to an endogenous vision of cooperativism, as the Plan intends for a Cooperative Decade, Heller defined the scenario to act: “The perception of the contemporary societies’ complexity cannot disregard the oscillations shaking the world. With the neo-liberal wave, in its different versions, a conceptual triad was installed which worked as an ideological matrix of the financial globalization with the hegemony of transnational corporations: the end of the story, the expirations of states, and the end of politics. The relation between economy and politics with world scale pretentions was systematized by the Washington Consensus body of ideas. Decisions, in the hands of states in other times, were transferred to those new managers with neo-imperial airs. The IMF and the World Bank missions became the compulsory pattern for the politically correct behavior in each country.” The global crisis has multiple simultaneous dimensions and expresses the exhaustion of a model. In front to this reality, a new map arises in Latin America, where -according to Heller- “a new thinking pattern is getting stronger and their economic results and their low contamination from the global crisis is carefully observed and is also the recipient of important interntational economists and politicians’ flatteries. The core substantial question is enhancing the value of States and the complementarities of regional integration.” The current world, according to what analysts of all orientations recognize, is under a crisis. Divergences appear upon defining the features of said crisis, its causes, its consequences and action lines that must be implemented to overcome it. Every day, we proved the existence of “a rich world creating poor people, of an unprecedented scientific and technological development with a meanness application, with the extension of life expectations without values and future ideals correlation for younger generations, with an increasing helplessness of basic and universal childhood rights, such as health, education, and equality of chances.” Meanwhile, “In Latin America, in the frame of break-up processes with the neo-liberal heritage, cooperativism has been called to become a part in the construction of new social organization models” and “we are proud of being a part of the historical experience which understands cooperativism as a social transformation tool.” In this body of ideas, ratified in our daily practice, the support to the position adopted by the Southern Sub-region of ICA Americas is based on, which concludes stating as follows: «Our perspective is that we are builders of a new world; that will enable us not only to be proactive enough for times going through, but also to COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 37 deepen the cooperative movement in favor of transforming today’s relationships among human beings and defending needs and aspirations of common citizens. Our objective must be fight not only for democratization of human relations but also for common property of the production, distribution and exchange means among human beings. (...) LET’S WORK SO THAT THE WORLD BE THE COOPERATIVE OF EVERYONE!»(3) (3) Revista Idelcoop [Idelcoop Magazine] No. 209, March 2013, page 92. BANCO CREDICOOP 38 Cooperative Social Responsibility Report RSCoop - Measuring Process EL PROCESO DE MEDICIÓN DE LA RESPONSABILIDAD SOCIAL COOPERATIVA (RSCoop) This is the second Cooperative Social Responsibility Report that Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado draws up based on the institutional and political decision assumed the previous year regarding the beginning of the measuring process of its Cooperative Social Responsibility in base to the weighting of the Cooperative Principles. The review of the documentation submitted and considered for this Second Cooperative Social Responsibility Report shows that the Banco Credicoop’s Cooperative Social Responsibility is assumed and understood as the one to which a cooperative commits itself from its essence and in compliance with the Cooperative Principles, through an ethical and seethrough behavior which: Contributes to the sustainable development; Has a positive impact on the community; Satisfies the members´ needs; Contributes to the improvement of quality of life and human dignity”.(4) The continuity of this measuring process of the Cooperative Social Responsibility allows mentioning the different advances that have been producing therein. From the ICA Americas Social Audit, in this sense, we highlight the: Strenthening of the Internal Team formed by board members and officers as Internal Social Responsible Persons for the preparation process of the Cooperative Social Responsibility Report. Said internal team is made up by the following persons: - Melchor Cortés - Board of Administration Secretary - Reynaldo Luis Pettinari – Secretary for Cooperative Education - Alfredo T. García - Financial Economic Advisor - Ángela Carulli - Commercial Strategy Management Department - José Luis Lago - Strategic Planning and Management Control Department (4) Ibidem 2 BANCO CREDICOOP 40 The integrity of the work done by this team formed by leaders from the institutional structure and hierarchical staff from the functional structure. This meant a permanent joint work under the efficiency and effectiveness conjunction, during a year of shared work with the Social Audit. Deeping of the measuring process: As a consequence of data and variables systematization of the first BSCoop, the review and consideration of some highlights has been deepened: - Incorporation of new items which could have not been quantified in the first BSCoop, especially in the calculation of the Invisible Cooperative Added Value - Deepening in the review of the Work Environment Dimension - Incorporation of new Dimensions, such as “Fair Operating Practices”, quided by the Bank’s Necessary Minimum Profitability concept The creation of necessary spaces for analysis and reflection from the Cooperative Education Secretariat by means of workshops with the Zonal Secretaries for Cooperative Education, and from different Members’ Committees. The spreading of the first BSCoop report carried out by many Members’ Committees and branches’ managers, which allowed the promotion of the RSCoop concept, enabling the communication of the role that Banco Credicoop plays in each community. The profuse spreading task got the different competent local institutions, bodies and Municipalities to declare the Banco Credicoop’s Cooperative Social Responsibility Report as a report of interest. Among the received declarations and distinctions, the following are mentioned: From Provinces Instituto de Promoción Cooperativa y Mutualidades de la Provincia de Entre Ríos [Benefit societies and Cooperative Promotion Institute of the Province of Entre Ríos]. Dirección de Cooperativas y Mutualidades del Ministerio de Producción de la Provincia del Chaco [Bureau of Benefit societies and Cooperatives of the Ministry of Production of the Province of Chaco]. Dirección de Cooperativas del Ministerio de la Producción, Trabajo y Turismo de la Provincia de Corrientes [Bureau of Cooperatives of the Ministry of Production, Work and Tourism of the Province of Corrientes]. Dirección de Cooperativas y Mutuales de Ministerio de Desarrollo Social de la Provincia de Río Negro [Bureau of Benefit Societies and Cooperative of the Ministry of Social Development of the Province of Río Negro]. Ministerio de Acción Cooperativa, Mutual, Comercio e Integración de la Provincia de Misiones [Ministry of Cooperative, Mutual, Trade and Integration Action of the Province of Misiones]. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 41 From Municipalities and/or Villages Municipality of Bahía Blanca, Province of Buenos Aires. Municipality of Alejo Ledesma, Marcos Juárez District, Province of Córdoba. Municipality of Venado Tuerto, Province of Santa Fe. Municipality of Hilario Ascasubi, Province of Buenos Aires. Honorable Consejo Municipal de Villa Cañas [Honorable Municipal Council of Villa Cañas], Province of Santa Fe. Honorable Concejo Deliberante del Partido de Guaminí [Honorable Deliberating Body of the Guaminí District], Province of Buenos Aires. Comisión Comunal de Bombal [Local Council of Bombal], Province of Santa Fe. Comisión Comunal de La Chispa [Local Council of La Chispa], Province of Santa Fe. Comisión Comunal de Murphy [Local Council of Murphy], Province of Santa Fe. Comisión Comunal de María Teresa [Local Council of María Teresa], Province of Santa Fe. Comuna de Bigand [Commune of Bigand], Province of Santa Fe. Comuna de Santa Isabel [Commune of Santa Isabel], Province of Santa Fe. Below we describe some main activities developed for the spreading and debate of the first Cooperative Social Responsibility Report carried out with members, institutions and general public by the Bank’s Branches: Branch 033 Munro Broadcast in the radio program “Munro Institucional” [Institutional Munro]. Branch 044 Quilmes Presentations of theBSCoop. Dates: –December 6, 2012– Cooperativa de Trabajo Audiovisual “Ojo Alternativo” [Audiovisual Work Cooperative] in its Administration Board’s meeting. –March 15, 2013– “Fundal” Fundación Gobernador Oscar Allende [Foundation]. Visit to Education and Culture Secretariat of the Municipality of Quilmes. Branch 074 Caseros Centro Meetings with Members. Dates: May 25, 2013 and August 17, 2013. The Members’ Committee met with members who attended the Branch during the operation and they were informed about BSCoop. Branch 089 Mar del Plata Centro BSCoop spreading meeting. Date: March 20, 2013. Within the framework of the activities carried out due to the Women’s Day, a meeting was held in the Branch with the participation of Members’ BANCO CREDICOOP 42 Committee, Officers and 10 invited institutions. Branch 096 San Rafael BSCoop submission to the Finance Secretary of the Municipality. Talk with small businessmen of San Rafael. Branch 104 Tres Arroyos Submission to the Municipal Mayor. Presentation in the International Year of Cooperatives event. Date: December 28, 2012. In the event of discovering a commemorative plate for the International Year of Cooperatives, in the San Martín de Tres Arroyos square, the Bank’s BSCoop and the certification granted by ICA Americas were referred to. Attendees: Municipal Authorities, representatives of local cooperatives, members and employees. Branch 115 Mendoza Centro Review and Reflection Workshop on the Cooperative Social Responsibility Report. Date: March 12, 2013. Attendees: 43 persons among local leaders, Branch’s staff and representatives of 3 community institutions. Debate over the Cooperative Social Responsibility Report. Date: July 27, 2013. Attendees: 140 persons mainly members of the community entities. Branch 124 Casbas Presentation to Social Economy entities. Submission to the Deliberating Body of the Guaminí District. The Deliberating Body of the Guaminí District declared the BSCoop of Banco Credicoop Coop. Ltdo., of Municipal interest. Branch 127 Bahía Blanca Presentation to the Mayor and Government Secretary of Municipality. Date: May 2013. A meeting was held in the facilities of the Municipality of Bahía Blanca where the Mayor and the Government Secretary of the Municipality participated. On July 8, 2013, through an Executive Order No. 1335/2013, the Municipal Mayor declared the Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado’s BSCoop of Municipal Interest. Branch 131 Saladillo Meeting with representatives of associated enterprises. Date: May 28, 2013. Meeting with Cooperativa de Saladillo [Cooperative]. Date: June 25, 2013. Attendees: 29 persons, 6 represented entities. Branch 132 Cipoletti Presentation to cooperatives. Attendees: 18 persons, 7 cooperatives. Public event of BSCoop presentation. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 43 Attendees: 60 persons, with the presence of: The Mayor of the City, the President of Federación de Cooperativas de la Provincia de Río Negro [a Cooperatives Federation] and Cooperatives of the City. Branch 145 Paraná BSCoop Presentation Meeting. Attendees: the President of the Instituto de Cooperativas y Mutuales de la Provincia de Entre Rios [a Cooperatives and Benefit societies Institute], the Ministry of Production of the Province of Entre Ríos; members of the Cooperative La Agrícola Regional Coop. Ltda., the Cooperativa Ganadera de Ramírez [a Livestock Cooperative], the Cooperativa de Servicios Públicos y Agrícola de San Martín [a Public Services and Agricultural Cooperative] and the Cooperativa Agropecuaria de la Paz [an Agricultural Cooperative]. Likewise, members of the Consejo Empresario de Entre Ríos [Entrepreneur Committee] also participated. The President of the Cooperatives and Benefit societies Institute of the Province of Entre Rios declared the Banco Credicoop Coop Ltdo.’s Cooperative Social Responsibility Report of Provincial Interest. Branch 156 Bolívar The Cooperative Social Responsibility Report was submitted and delivered to Municipal authorities. Branch 264 María Teresa RMeeting with local and regional institutions. Date: August 20, 2013. Meeting with local and regional institutions to read the Municipal Ordinance which declared the presentation of BSCoop of General Interest. Branch 270 Alejo Ledesma Presentation to intermediate institutions and municipal authorities. Date: May 30, 2013. Place: Branch’s facilities. Attendees: 44 persons, representatives of all intermediate institutions of the town, being highlighted the presence of the Municipal Mayor and members of the Honorable Deliberating Body. Also, we had the presence of local media and media from the neighbour town of Arias, which published an extensive press release in the Diario Poder Ciudadano [a newspaper]. By Executive Order No. 36/13 dated June 28, 2013, the Municipal Mayor declared the report of Municipal Interest. Branch 281 Venado Tuerto BSCoop Presentation Event. Date: July 25, 2013. Attendees: 50 persons, 10 institutions, representatives of the Municipality of Venado Tuerto, with the presence of television, broadcasting and press media. The Municipal Mayor of Venado Tuerto through Executive Order No. 107/13 dated July 12, 2013, declared the presentation of Banco Credicoop Coop Ltdo.’s BSCoop of Municipal Community Interest. BANCO CREDICOOP 44 Branch 288 Rosario Centro Meeting of presentation to cooperatives, committees and benefit societies related to the Branch. Date: July 31, 2013. Attendees: 9 Institutions. Branch 289 Arribeños Meeting with Councilmen of the town taking part of the Deliberating Body of the General Arenales District, Province of Buenos Aires. Date: May 9, 2013. Branch 293 Firmat Meeting of presentation and spreading of the Cooperative Social Responsibility Report. Attendees: Representatives of the 30 local Institutions and Municipal and from the Honorable Municipal Council authorities. In such meeting, the Bank’s institutional videos, advertisement and the speech that the President of Banco Credicoop, Mr. Carlos Heller, gave at the United Nations venue were projected. Branch 338 Pergamino Meeting with Cooperatives of Pergamino District. Date: June 4, 2013. Attendees: 16 persons representing 7 cooperatives. Branch 345 Malabrigo Meeting with local intermediate entities. Date: December 19, 2012. Attendees: 25 persons. Meeting with Administration Board and officers of Cooperativa Agropecuaria de Malabrigo Ltda. [An Agricultural Cooperative]. Date: April 14, 2013. Branch 353 Santa Isabel Presentation to Cooperatives and Entities. Date: May 28, 2013. Attendees: 9 Institutions. Branch 359 Elortondo Spreading Meeting. Date: May 23, 2013. Attendees: 30 persons, 6 institutions. Branch 365 San Cristóbal Meeting with Members. Date: May 30, 2013. Attendees: 10 persons with the presence of the Municipality of San Cristobal Mayor. Branch 370 Bombal Meeting of presentation of the first BSCoop. Date: May 9, 2013. Attendees: 40 persons, 7 represented Institutions. The Commune of Bombal declared the Banco Credicoop Coop Ltdo.’s Cooperative Social Responsibility Report of Municipal Interest, through COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 45 Ordinance No. 15/2013 dated June 12, 2013. Branch 375 Resistencia Meeting with Cooperative Board of Directors of Chaco. The Director in charge of the Dirección de Cooperativas y Mutualidades de la Provincia del Chaco [Cooperatives and Benefit societies of the Province of Chaco Bureau] declared the Banco Credicoop Coop Ltdo.’s Cooperative Social Responsibility Report of Provincial Interest, through Provision No. 007/13 dated May 23, 2013. Meeting with representative of the Professional Association of Economic Sciences. Meetings with Cooperatives. Branch 377 Vera Review and Reflection Workshop. Date: April 30, 2013. Attendees: Representatives of 5 local cooperatives and members of the Members’ Committee. Branch 380 Villa Mugueta Meeting of presentation of the Cooperative Social Responsibility Report. Date: August 1, 2013. Attendees: Representatives from 11 institutions with the presence of the Local Mayor. Branch 383 Bigand Meeting with local Institutions. Date: June 18, 2013. Attendees: 40 persons representing 15 Institutions and the presence of Cablevisión Bigand. Submission to the Local President. Date: June 25, 2013. The Local President, by means of Resolution No. 12/2013 dated July 4, 2013, declared the Banco Credicoop Coop Ltdo.’s Cooperative Social Responsibility Report of Local Interest. Branch 386 Murphy Presentation to Institutions. Date: June 25, 2013. Attendees: 12 persons representing 6 institutions. Distribution of the BSCoop copies to the Commune. The Local Committee of Murphy declared the presentation of Banco Credicoop Coop Ltdo.’s BSCoop of Interest, according to Ordinance No. 1275/13 dated July 23, 2013. Branch 388 Reconquista Presentation of the BSCoop. Date: February 26, 2013. Attendees: 23 persons representing 12 work cooperatives and the presence of the President of the Federación de Cooperativas de Trabajo de Reconquista [Work Cooperatives Federation of Reconquista]. Filial 537 Junín Spreading in press media. BANCO CREDICOOP 46 Date: December 2012. Press releases on the presentation of the BSCoop were published in local newpapers -printed and digital issues- and also different radio stations were visited where an exposition was made over the matter. We reproduced in this second presentation, the statement valid for all cooperatives and, therefore, for Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado: The Cooperative Social Responsibility Report is “a socio-economic management tool which enables cooperatives to measure themselves and expound their efficiency and effectiveness to the interest groups impacted by their work, as regards the compliance with their own essence and identity, what is to say, the Cooperative Principles.(5) (5) Ibidem 2 COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 47 Identifying Data DATOS IDENTIFICATORIOS Foundation Date Merger agreement execution by 44 small credit cooperatives on December 26, 1977. Argentina’s Central Bank transformation project approval: On December 2, 1978 - Resolution No. 406. Organizational Meeting: on December 21, 1978. Registration Date February 19, 1979 – Resolution by Instituto Nacional de Acción Cooperativa –INAC– [National Institute for Cooperative Action]. Startup Date March 19, 1979. Reform to the Bylaws 1. May 1998 - INACyM Resolution. 2. Passed at the General Meeting of Delegates held on October 28, 2004 and approved under Resolution No. 3305 of Instituto Nacional de Asociativismo y Economía Social [National Institute of Associativism and Social Economy] on October 21, 2005. Registered under Book 55°, Folio 362, Minutes No. 24.597, on October 26, 2005. Registered at - Instituto Nacional de Asociativismo y Economía Social –INAES– [A monitoring body for cooperatives in Argentina] National License: No. 8.945. - Banco Central de la República Argentina –BCRA– 1.4.028. (Argentina’s Central Bank) Fiscal Year No. 36 Started July 1, 2012. Closing June 30, 2013. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 49 Legal Domicile Reconquista 484 C 1003ABJ – Autonomous City of Buenos Aires Argentine Republic Phone (5411) 4320 5000 Website www.bancocredicoop.coop BANCO CREDICOOP 50 Mission, Vision, Values, Corporate Purpose and Strategic Goals MISIÓN, VISIÓN, VALORES, OBJETO SOCIAL Y OBJETIVOS ESTRATÉGICOS MISSION “Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado is a Cooperative Bank owned by its Members, democratically managed. It is heir and follower of the valuable work carried out by the cooperative credit institutions since the beginning of the 20th century. Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado was set up under the guidance of the Instituto Movilizador de Fondos Cooperativos which still continues to offer its advice on institutional matters. Our main task is to provide efficient and high-quality financial services to our Members, with special emphasis on credit assistance to small and medium-sized enterprises, cooperatives, social economy enterprises, and individuals, all of them located both at large urban centers and at small towns of our country. Deposits received are redirected first and foremost to grant financing within the same location. We aspired to contribute to the national economic progress and to the construction of a solidarity-based society with equitable distribution to secure a life with dignity for all the Argentines. We conceived our contribution to these objectives through a growing participation in the national financial activity, by means of the spreading of cooperativism principles and values, and taking an active part within the national and international cooperative movement as well as in popular movements which share our intention to build a fair and solidarity society”. VISION To be the First National Private Bank. VALUES Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado’s values coincide with those values supported by the International Cooperative Alliance (ICA). BANCO CREDICOOP 52 “Cooperatives are based on mutual aid, responsibility, democracy, equality, equity and solidarity values. Following its founders’ tradition, their members believe in ethical values such as honesty, transparency, social responsibility and concern about the others” (ICA - Manchester 1995). CORPORATE PURPOSE As per Section 5 of the Bylaws: “The Bank will have as corporate purpose all lending, deposit and services-related operations that Commercial Banks can perform, as per Ley de Entidades Financieras (Financial Entities Act) and the laws in force and/or those which may be passed eventually by the Argentina’s Central Bank”. The Section 6 states the following: “The Bank, in compliance with its corporate purpose, will render services to its Members and non-members, adjusting itself to the cooperative principles and legal and regulatory rules applicable in order to promote its economic, social and cultural development. It will support productive and services-related activities, and will encourage the cooperative credit aimed at housing and consumption, as well as any work which may help the economic and social progress of the different regions from the country. The Bank will tend to an equitable distribution of the credit by redirecting savings from each area within the location where they are produced, as far as possible. It will foster the creation and development of cooperative entities by giving its support to those already existing. It will provide its Members with any kind of information and technical and economic advice to help them achieve the best performance of their activities. It will contribute to increase its Members’ cultural knowledge and to spread the cooperative principles and methods by means of conferences, publishing and training courses and libraries”. STRATEGIC GOALS Strategic goals are as follows: Strengthening the Institutional Management By increasing the number of members to continue making progress in the achievement of our cooperative and solidarity goals with a greater involvement of our Members andpersonnel, with particular emphasis on the distinguishing characteristic of our truly national and cooperative nature. Being efficient in all our actions and projects In order to develop a competitive entity capable of achieving the satisfaction of our Members and users, as well as a greater participation in the financial market. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 53 Achieving the necessary minimum profitability for the support of our cooperative enterprise To be able to fulfill our growth plans and the resulting capitalization needs and investment requirements. Achieving a permanent growth in Deposits, Loans and Services, preserving a high quality for the Assets and an adequate Liquidity level In order to guarantee the fulfillment of our goals efficiently in line with the responsibility which implies to keep the status of being a large Cooperative Bank. Reinforcing our presence in the Financial System based on our branches’ network throughout the country, our great experience in customized attention to members and users of the banking services, particularly loans to SMEs, and strengthening links with organizations from the economy social sector”. Social Audit Note We state that the fulfillment of the Mission, Vision and Values, framed within the observance and compliance with the Cooperative Principles, is set up as a hypothesis to be ratified or rectified in the Final Report of this Cooperative Social Responsibility Report. BANCO CREDICOOP 54 Products and Services PRODUCTOS Y SERVICIOS ENTERPRISES, SMEs AND SOCIAL NATURE ENTITIES Accounts Commercial Current Account Current Account for Social Nature Entities Current Account for Micro and Small Enterprises Practical Account for Co-op Owners Associations Commercial Current Account for Endorsements Special Current Account for Legal Persons Cards AgroCabal Cabal Corporate Card Wholesale Card Visa Business Card Mastercard Corporate Card Pre-charged Card Insurance Property - Integral Insurance for Commerce and Industry - Automobile insurance (Individual and Fleet) - Transport of goods in Foreign Trade operations Life - Mandatory Life Insurance - AssurEmpresas – Collective Life Insurance - Corporate - Collective Life Insurance for entities Others - Guarantee for directors - Labor Risks BANCO CREDICOOP 56 Loans for SMEs, Enterprises and Social Nature Entities Investment loans - Acquisition of capital goods - Mortgage loans for purchase and construction of real property - Loans for Productive Investment - 0% Rate Loans - Special Agreements with Enterprises Evolution Loans - Advance in current account - Deferred check discount - Advance in current account with invoice pledge - Working capital Loans - Thirteenth Salary Loans - Loan for SME Development - Imports financing in ARS pesos Credicoop Leasing Special Programs Loans - Bicentenary’s Productive Financing Program - Encouragement to Growth Program (PEC, Spanish acronym) - Technological Innovation Program – “FONTAR” Loans guaranteed by Cross-guarantees Companies - Loans in US Dollars for exporters For the Agricultural Industry - Loans for sowing - Loans for Infrastructure - Loans for purchase of breeding animals - Loans for grains retention and Warrant - Loans for harvest and transport (Provinces of Mendoza and San Juan) - Loans for Working capital for livestock Foreign Trade Export - Letters of Credit - Payment orders - Collections - International guarantees - Securities receivable due to exports Import - Letters of Credit - Documentary collection - Guaranteed drafts - Advanced payments Financing - Import Transactions - Export Transactions - Export pre-financing Special Transactions COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 57 - International Transfers - Payment orders received from overseas - Securities receivable Internet Business Banking Transactions - Export Advanced Payments - Import Payment Orders Forms Library Summary of Exchange Regulations Cooperation Agreements Seminars and Workshops Savings and Investment Fixed Term Deposits Mutual Funds Purchase and Sale of Bonds and Stocks Purchase and Sale of Foreign Currency Forward Offset Transactions Salary Plan Salary Plan Services Treasury Collection Services - Direct-from-account Debit (from any Financial Entity) - Collections with Deposit Card - Invoice Collection - Link Payments - Automatic Debit with credit card Payment Services - Suppliers Payment - Taxes and Services Payment - Transfers - Payroll Services Other financial services - Portfolio administration - Cash letter Services - 24 hours drop depository - Door to door service Automatic means Corporate Internet Banking - AFIP [Federal Administration of Public Revenue] Payments - Customs payments Datanet Messages and notices service Automatic teller machines Self-service terminals BANCO CREDICOOP 58 STORES Accounts Cooperative Commercial Account Commercial Current Account Card Adhesion Service Payment service to commercial stores Debit and Credit Card - Cabal - Fraterna - Visa - Mastercard - Argencard - Lider - Ticket Nación - Dinners Club - American Express Payment service to Commercial Stores Tickets - Accord - Sodhexo Insurances Property - Integral Insurance for Commerce and Industry - Automobile Insurance For individuals - Mandatory Collective Life Insurance - AssurEmpresas Others - Labor Risks Loans Express Payment of Coupons Investment loans Advances on Current Account with Agreements Automatic advances on Current Account for commercial stores with card payment Evolution Loans Credicoop Leasing Saving and Investment Fixed Term Deposits Mutual Funds Purchase and Sale of Bonds and Stocks Purchase and Sale of Foreign Currency Forward Offset Transactions Data Capture Terminals (“POS”) COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 59 Automatic means Commercial Stores Internet Banking - AFIP [Federal Administration of Public Revenue] Payments - Settlement of Commercial Stores by Internet Messages and notices service Credicoop Responde [Credicoop Answers] Phone Banking Automatic teller machines Self-service Terminals E-commerce Collection by Internet Stores Website Treasury Management Collection Services - Direct-from-account Debit (from any Financial Entity) - Collections with Deposit Card - Link Payments - Automatic Debit with credit card Payment Services - Suppliers Payment - Taxes and Services Payment - Transfers - Payroll Services Other financial services - Portfolio administration - Cash letter Services INDIVIDUAL Accounts Universal Free Account Basic Account Savings Account (in ARS and USD) Credicuenta (special current account) Salary Account Social Security Salary Account Young Account Universal Child Allowance Account Argentina Works Account Credicoop Credit Cards Cabal Cabal Universitaria (for university students) Fraterna Visa Mastercard BANCO CREDICOOP 60 Cabal Credicoop Debit Card Insurances Property - Automobile - Protected Collection - Personal Accidents - Combined Family - ATM Protection For individuals - Life AssurVida. Uniform Capital Collective Individual Life. AssurplanMax AssurplanMax Spouses - Life plus Savings Universal Projects Universal Studies Universal Woman Universal Continuity Loans for Housing Purchase Construction / Enlargement / Completion Loans to Individuals Automatic Loans Loans with agreement / salary discount Loans for retired people ANSES Pledge Loans Saving and Investment Fixed term deposits Mutual Funds Purchase and Sale of Bonds and Stocks Purchase and Sale of Foreign Currency Forward Offset Transactions Automatic means Automatic teller machines Self-service terminals Retail Internet Banking Messages and Notices service Credicoop Responde [Credicoop Answers] Phone Banking Search for Credicoop Benefits by cell phone AFIP Payments COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 61 Retirement and Pension Payment Service, with Products and Services offer. Salary payment service to Salary Earners, with Products and Services offer. Treasury Management Collection Services - Direct-from-account Debit (from any Financial Entity) - Collections with Deposit Card - Link Payments - Automatic Debit with credit card Link with Members Strengthening Programs - Points Program - Aerolíneas Plus - Credicoop Benefits and Savings Other services Emprendedor XXI (Entrepreneurs program) - Advice, support and financing service for the start-up of business projects of advanced students and professionals BANCO CREDICOOP 62 Territory of Influence TERRITORIO DE INFLUENCIA BANCO CREDICOOP GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION More than 20 Branches From 5 to 20 Branches From 1 to 5 Branches No Branches BANCO CREDICOOP 64 HEAD OFFICE Reconquista 484 C1003ABJ Autonomous City of Buenos Aires Argentine Republic Phone/fax: (5411) 4320 5000 S.W.I.F.T.: BCOOARBA http://www.bancocredicoop.coop E-mail: [email protected] BRANCHES Autonomous City of Buenos Aires Abasto - 014 Almagro - 241 Balvanera - 153 Barracas - 059 Belgrano - 226 Bicentenario - 247 Caballito - 225 Catedral - 440 Centro - 001 Colegiales - 011 Flores Centro - 065 Flores Norte - 221 Flores Sud - 046 Liniers - 007 Mataderos - 050 Monserrat - 119 Núñez - 002 Once - 026 Parque Chacabuco - 041 Parque Patricios - 004 Paternal - 031 Plaza - 173 Plaza de Mayo - 246 Plaza Lavalle - 218 Plaza Miserere - 249 Pompeya - 015 Puente de la Mujer - 244 Puerto Madero - 174 Saavedra - 042 San Cristóbal Norte - 039 Tribunales - 070 Villa Villa Villa Villa Villa Villa Villa Villa Crespo - 006 Devoto - 027 Mitre - 043 Ortúzar - 060 Pueyrredón - 022 Sahores - 052 Soldati - 032 Urquiza - 057 Greater Buenos Aires Northwestern Zone Caseros Centro - 074 Hurlingham - 025 José Ingenieros - 023 Loma Hermosa - 231 San Martín - 020 Villa Lynch - 029 Villa Maipú - 056 Villa Parque Caseros - 068 Northern Zone Altos del Talar - 227 El Talar - 197 Martínez - 076 Munro - 033 Munro Centro - 248 Olivos - 149 San Fernando - 024 San Isidro - 223 Villa Adelina - 055 Villa Martelli - 069 Western Zone Castelar - 013 Ciudadela - 008 Haedo - 037 Ituzaingó - 036 COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 65 Lomas del Mirador - 072 Moreno - 030 Morón - 038 Pcias. Unidas - 140 Rafael Castillo - 078 Ramos Mejía - 003 San Justo - 034 Villa Insuperable - 005 Southern Zone 9 de Abril - 198 Avellaneda - 054 Berazategui - 021 Berisso - 236 Burzaco - 233 Crucesita - 079 Dock Sud - 067 Florencio Varela - 240 Lanús - 028 Lomas de Zamora - 049 Mercado Central - 220 Monte Grande - 018 Piñeyro - 017 Quilmes - 044 Remedios de Escalada - 066 San Francisco Solano - 062 Turdera - 035 Valentín Alsina - 010 Wilde - 061 Province of Buenos Aires 9 de Julio 9 de Julio - 117 25 de Mayo 25 de Mayo - 139 Arrecifes Arrecifes - 358 Arribeños Arribeños - 289 Bahía Blanca Bahía Blanca - 127 Barrio Hospital - 143 General Cerri - 135 Ingeniero White - 090 Las Villas - 129 Noroeste - 130 Plaza Shopping - 120 Villa Rosas - 157 Batán Batán - 138 Bolivar Bolivar - 156 Bragado Bragado - 128 Campana Campana - 222 Carhué Carhué - 126 Carlos Casares Carlos Casares - 341 Casbas Casbas - 124 Colón Colón - 349 Chacabuco Chacabuco - 142 Chivilcoy Chivilcoy - 144 Darregueira Darregueira - 148 Ensenada Ensenada - 434 Hilario Ascasubi Hilario Ascasubi - 106 Junín Junín - 537 La Plata La Cumbre - 437 La Plata - 019 Plaza San Martín La Plata - 439 Zona Sur La Plata - 432 Las Flores Las Flores - 125 Lincoln Lincoln - 291 Luján Luján - 095 Mar del Plata Mar del Plata Centro - 089 Juan B. Justo - 084 Monolito - 118 Puerto - 094 Miramar Miramar - 121 BANCO CREDICOOP 66 Necochea Necochea - 103 Olavarría Olavarría - 230 Pehuajó Pehuajó - 371 Pergamino Pergamino - 338 Pigüé Pigüé - 111 Pilar Pilar - 122 Puan Puan - 080 Rojas Rojas - 342 Saladillo Saladillo - 131 Salto Salto - 350 San Nicolás San Nicolás - 224 Tandil Tandil - 136 Trenque Lauquen Trenque Lauquen - 186 Tres Arroyos Tres Arroyos - 104 Zárate Zárate - 092 Province of Córdoba Alcira Gigena Alcira Gigena - 495 Alejo Ledesma Alejo Ledesma - 270 Almafuerte Almafuerte - 496 Córdoba Alem - 429 Córdoba Centro - 100 Los Boulevares - 232 San Vicente - 416 Marcos Juárez Marcos Juárez - 250 Río Cuarto Río Cuarto - 494 Río Tercero Río Tercero - 497 San Francisco San Francisco - 346 Villa María Villa María - 112 Province of Corrientes Corrientes Corrientes - 376 Province of Chaco Resistencia Resistencia - 375 Presidente Roque Sáenz Peña Roque Sáenz Peña - 378 Province of Chubut Comodoro Rivadavia Comodoro Rivadavia - 082 Puerto Madryn Puerto Madryn - 151 Trelew Trelew - 146 Province of Entre Ríos Concepción del Uruguay Concepción del Uruguay - 219 Concordia Concordia - 141 Gualeguaychú Gualeguaychú - 217 Paraná Paraná - 145 Province of Jujuy San Salvador de Jujuy S. S. de Jujuy - 073 Province of La Pampa Jacinto Arauz Jacinto Arauz - 147 Santa Rosa Santa Rosa - 251 COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 67 Province of Mendoza Godoy Cruz Godoy Cruz - 116 Morandini - 316 Guaymallén Dorrego - 113 Mercado - 317 Rodeo de la Cruz - 324 Junín Junín - 319 Lavalle Lavalle - 315 Maipú Gutiérrez - 323 Maipú - 108 Mendoza Mendoza Centro - 115 Rivadavia Rivadavia - 318 San Martín Palmira - 320 San Rafael San Rafael - 096 Tunuyán Tunuyán - 321 Tupungato Tupungato - 322 Province of Misiones Posadas Posadas - 229 Province of Neuquén Centenario Centenario - 168 Neuquén Neuquén - 093 Province of Río Negro Cipolletti Cipolletti - 132 General Roca General Roca - 238 Río Colorado Río Colorado - 134 San Carlos de Bariloche Bariloche - 137 Viedma Viedma - 242 Province of Salta Ciudad de Salta Salta - 085 Province of San Juan Ciudad de San Juan San Juan - 063 Province of San Luis San Luis San Luis - 239 Province of Santa Fe Arroyo Seco Arroyo Seco - 286 Avellaneda Avellaneda Santa Fe - 343 Bigand Bigand - 383 Bombal Bombal - 370 Calchaquí Calchaquí - 372 Cañada de Gómez Cañada de Gómez - 275 Carmen Carmen - 357 Casilda Casilda - 381 Centeno Centeno - 262 El Trébol El Trébol - 266 Elortondo Elortondo - 359 Fighiera Fighiera - 268 Firmat Firmat - 293 General Lagos General Lagos - 285 Granadero Baigorria Granadero Baigorria - 364 BANCO CREDICOOP 68 Laguna Paiva Laguna Paiva - 366 Las Parejas Las Parejas - 283 Las Rosas Las Rosas - 265 Los Cardos Los Cardos - 368 Malabrigo Malabrigo - 345 Margarita Margarita - 490 María Juana María Juana - 267 María Susana María Susana - 296 María Teresa María Teresa - 264 Murphy Murphy - 386 Pérez Pérez - 292 Piamonte Piamonte - 331 Pueblo Esther Pueblo Esther - 287 Rafaela Rafaela - 369 Reconquista Reconquista Santa Fe - 388 Rosario Coral - 274 La Florida - 086 Ovidio Lagos - 091 Rosario Centro - 288 Rosario Norte - 081 Rosario Sur - 344 27 de Febrero - 083 San Cristóbal San Cristóbal Santa Fe - 365 San Genaro San Genaro - 385 San Jorge San Jorge - 362 San Justo Mariano Cabal San Justo - 334 San Lorenzo San Lorenzo - 272 San Martín de las Escobas San Martín de las Escobas - 374 San Vicente San Vicente - 348 Santa Clara de Saguier Santa Clara de Saguier - 336 Santa Fe Las Flores - 294 Santa Fe - 340 Santa Isabel Santa Isabel - 353 Sastre Sastre - 335 Soldini Soldini - 295 Venado Tuerto Venado Tuerto - 281 Vera Vera - 377 Videla Videla - 333 Villa Cañas Villa Cañas - 533 Villa Constitución Villa Constitución - 237 Villa Gobernador Gálvez Villa Gobernador Gálvez - 276 Villa Mugueta Villa Mugueta - 380 Province of Santiago del Estero Santiago del Estero Santiago del Estero - 105 Province of Tucumán San Miguel de Tucumán Tucumán - 047 COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 69 DISTRIBUTION OF BRANCHES PER PROVINCES Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado has an exclusive network of services throughout the national territory formed by 251 Branches distributed in 22 zones. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF BRANCHES Branches % 49 53 39 2 3 12 1 4 1 2 15 1 2 5 1 1 1 57 1 1 251 19.52 21.11 15.54 0.80 1.19 4.78 0.40 1.59 0.40 0.80 5.97 0.40 0.80 1.99 0.40 0.40 0.40 22.71 0.40 0.40 100.00 Greater Buenos Aires (Northwestern Zone: 9, Northern Zone: 9, Western Zone: 12, Southern Zone: 19) Province of Buenos Aires Autonomous City of Buenos Aires Province of Chaco Province of Chubut Province of Córdoba Province of Corrientes Province of Entre Ríos Province of Jujuy Province of La Pampa Province of Mendoza Province of Misiones Province of Neuquén Province of Río Negro Province of Salta Province of San Juan Province of San Luis Province of Santa Fe Province of Santiago del Estero Province of Tucumán Total Total of Branches: 251. The Bank is present in 182 cities and/or towns of 18 Provinces and in different neighborhoods of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires. There are correspondents abroad in 72 countries. 35.06% out of the total branches are located in the Autonomous City of Buenos and Greater Buenos Aires. 43.82% out of the total branches are located in the Provinces of Buenos Aires and Santa Fe. During the course of the Fiscal Year, the Branch 251 was opened in the city of Santa Rosa, Province of La Pampa. BANCO CREDICOOP 70 COMPARISON OF NUMBER OF BRANCHES OVER THE EXISTING POPULATION IN EACH TOWN Population Less than 3,000 inhabitants From 3,001 to 5,000 inhabitants From 5,001 to 10,000 inhabitants From 10,001 to 30,000 inhabitants From 30,001 to 50,000 inhabitants From 50,001 to 75,000 inhabitants From 75,0001 to 100,000 inhabitants From 101,000 to 150,000 inhabitants From 150,001 to 200,000 inhabitants From 200,001 to 500,000 inhabitants From 500,001 to 750,000 inhabitants From 750,001 to 1,000,000 inhabitants More than 1,000,000 inhabitants Autonomous City of Buenos Aires (above 2,800,000 inhabitants) Total Number of Branches 11 14 14 32 28 14 24 21 10 20 13 0 11 39 251 % 4.38 5.58 5.58 12.75 11.15 5.58 9.56 8.37 3.98 7.97 5.18 0.00 4.38 15.54 100.00 Based on the aforementioned, it is weighted that out of the total of Branches (251): 9.96% are located in towns with less than 5,000 inhabitants; 15.54% in towns and cities with less than 10,000 inhabitants; 28.29% in towns and cities with less than 30,000 inhabitants; 39.44% in towns and cities with less than 50,000 inhabitants; 54.58% in towns and cities with less than 100,000 inhabitants; 25.10% in cities with more than 500,000 inhabitants (considering that this percentage includes 39 Branches located in different neighborhoods belonging to the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires): 15.54% of Branches are distributed in 34 neighborhoods of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires. The listed percentages ratify the federal nature of this cooperative enterprise. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 71 CORRESPONDENTS ABROAD List of countries Algeria Angola Austria Bangladesh Belarus Belgium Bolivia Bosnia-Herzegovina Brazil Bulgary Canada Chile China Colombia Costa Rica Croatia, Republic of Cuba Czech Republic Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hong Kong Hungary India Indonesia Israel Italy Japan Kazakhstan Korea, Republic of Latvia Lebanon Lithuania Malaysia Mexico Morocco Mozambique Netherlands Norway Pakistan Panama Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Russian Federation Singapore Slovakia Slovenia South Africa Spain Sri Lanka Sweden Taiwan Thailand Turkey Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland United States of America Uruguay Venezuela Vietnam BANCO CREDICOOP 72 Institutional Organization Chart ORGANIGRAMA INSTITUCIONAL We ratify that the institutional structure of Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado shows a democratic organization, grounds for solidarity-based organizations, in compliance with the legislation in force on the matter. The reading of the institutional organization chart demonstrates the achievement of a linkage where the cooperative value of democracy makes representativity has support in the real participative democracy of the basis. The following organization charts ratify what has been declared by the Social Audit. GENERAL INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE Make up the General Meeting of Delegates (829 regular and 829 alternate ones) Statutory Audit Committee Elects (3 Regular and 3 Alternate members) Elects (1) Zonal Members of the Administration Board Elect (2) Delegates participate in District Electoral Assemblies (Branch = Electoral District) Make up Make up the Administration Board (49 regular and 49 deputy members) Elects Elects Board of Secretary for Director Cooperative (9 members) Education Approves the structure of Zonal Advisory Committees (22) Foster and Coordinate Members´ Committees (251) Nourish Members of each Branch (1) The General Meeting of Delegates elects, at the proposal of each Zone's Delegates, 1 to 3 Zonal Members of the Administration Board according to the number of members. (2) District Assemblies elect one Delegate for the General Meeting per each 1.5 thousand members or a fraction exceeding 750 members registered at the Branch's electoral roll. BANCO CREDICOOP 74 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President 1st and 2nd Vice-Presidents “Crecer 21” Directors Committee Crisis Committee Credit Agreements Committee Regular Default Committee Information and Technology Committee Treasurer 1st and 2nd Pro-Treasurers make up Audit Committee Money Laundering Prevention Committee Main Debtors Board Risks Integral Management Committee Secretary 1st and 2nd Pro-Secretaries Special Default Committee Executive Committee Pr Co esi m den m itt t of ee M Br em an b ch ers 4 ' ' rs be em ch 2 f M an t o Br en e id itte es Pr mm Co President of Members' Committee Branch 1 President of Members' Committee Branch 3 ZONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE Permanent and Deputy Zonal Members of the Administration Board (1 and 3) Zonal Core Pr Co esi m den m itt t of ee M Br em an b ch ers ... ' President of Members' Committee Branch 7 ' rs be em ch 6 f M an t o Br en e id itte es Pr mm Co Zonal Manager Responsible for Zonal Cooperative Education President of Members' Committee Branch 5 COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 75 MEMBERS' COMMITTEES President and Vice-President Core = President, Manager and Education Secretary Management Plan Self-control and Follow-up Committee Members of the Members' Committee constitute the following Secretariats Records Default and Credit Agreements Cooperative Education Building Maintenance Cooperative Enterprise Management Relationships with Members and Institutions This analysis shall be deepened upon weighting the Second Cooperative Principle “Members’ Democratic Control”, where each body, which is part of the institutional structure, is reviewed in accordance with what is stated in the Bylaws and the entity actual practice. BANCO CREDICOOP 76 Highlights ALGUNOS INDICADORES Below we will list some relevant highlights related to the activity of our Cooperative upon the end of the fiscal year: Members: 868,015 Active participation of Members: 251 Members’ Committees. 3.027 thousand persons taking part of the Members’ Committee. 11.15 thousand Meetings of Members’ Committee during the Fiscal Year. 75.06% of effective attendance to the Member’s Committee meetings. 3.238 thousand members of the Secretariats. Total of Delegates: 829 Total of Branches: 251 Present in 18 provinces and in the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires. Correspondents abroad: 72 Pagocoop’s offices: 183 (distributed throughout the country), out of which 121 are located in the premises of social nature entities. Personnel in Numbers: Head Office: 1.949 thousand persons. Branches: 2.972 thousand persons. Total: 4.921 thousand persons. Main figures as of June 30, 2013: (*) Cash and Due from Banks: 5,499,897 Government and Corporate Securities: 7,195,721 Loans: 15,264,181 Loans for Financial Leases: 577,860 Property, Plant and Equipment: 401,283 (*) figures in thousand Argentine pesos BANCO CREDICOOP 78 Total of assets: 30,030,743 Deposits: 26,128,384 Members’ Equity: 2,304,593 Market Share: Eighth Bank of the Argentine Financial System measured in terms of deposits, with a 3.85% share of the total of deposits (Ranking April/2013). Tenth Bank of the Argentine Financial System measured in terms of loans, with a 3.21% share of the total of loans (Ranking April/2013). Segmentation of the Loan Portfolio: June 2013 21.58% Consumption Portfolio AR$ 3,419 (1) 21.58% 13.91% 100 Main Debtors AR$ 2,205 (2) 6.01% Rest of Commercial Portfolio AR$ 952 (3) 58.50% SME Portfolio ARS $ 9,271 (4) 6.01% 13.91% 58.50% in millions Argentine pesos (1) Loans to individuals, Mortgage loans for housing, Credit Cards. (2) Enterprises with greatest commercial debts according to the commercial debtors ranking prepared by BCCL. (3) Enterprises exceeding margins established by Micro and SMEs (not included in 100 Main Debtors). (4) Enterprises qualified as Micro and SMEs according to Communication “A” 5419 Argentina's Central Bank. Main financial referral of cooperatives, benefit societies and social nature entities related to: 6.891 thousand social nature entities that include: - 2.198 thousand cooperatives; - 568 benefit societies. Credit rating: Rating “Aa3.ar” granted by Moody’s Investors Service. Said rating shows a very strong credit capacity related to other national issuers. High quality and customized assistance: Quality Management System. ISO 9001/2008 Standards Certification. Systemic Measurement of Satisfaction. Institutional Meetings: 3.230 thousand meetings with small groups of Members, with 19.498 thousand participants. 1.085 thousand talks and debates, with 25,941 participants. 3.149 thousand spreading activities of the “Cooperative Proposal” with members and institutions, with 28,901 attendees. 810 Courses and Seminars, with 17.908 thousand participants. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 79 Total of products and services’ users: 1.484 million 7.69% growth during the Fiscal Year. First Private Bank in Stores Payments. The Bank most selected by enterprises to operate in foreign trade, with 20% of the market. Cabal Credit and Debit Cards: Network of stores “Credicoop Benefits”: Over 7 thousand point of sales. 615 thousand authorized Credit Cards. 1.2 million Debit Cards linked to accounts. Tarjeta CABAL Cuenta Empresa [Cabal Corporate Card]: 22.6 thousand enterprises holding such card. Tarjeta AGROCABAL [Agrocabal Credit Card] 8 thousand cards. Current Accounts: 123.9 thousand current accounts related to SMEs and Social Economy entities. Retail Banking Accounts: 1.1 million active accounts. Companies Payroll: Market share in Companies payroll: 11.00%. Over 16 thousand enterprises. Salary Earners: 455 thousand. Market share in Salary Earners: 5.90%. Insurance and Saving Plan: Brand: “Credicoop Seguros” Total of policies issued by Credicoop Seguros: 1,088,539. 8.40% growth Total of policies issued by Segurcoop C.S.L.: 873.838 thousand. 6.29% growth during the Fiscal Year. - Teller Machines Insurance: 441.922 thousands - Life Insurance: 169.296 thousands - Automobile Insurance: 69.431 thousands - Combined Family Insurance: 175.243 thousands - Integral Insurance for Stores: 17.946 thousands Total of policies issued by CNP Assurances C.S. S.A.: 214.701 thousands - Assurvida: 36.495 thousands. - Assurplan: 58.393 thousands. - CNP Universal: 26.132 thousands. - Personal Accidents: 93.681 thousands. BANCO CREDICOOP 80 Collection Services: Collection for 1.817 thousand enterprises. Over 18.5 million collections of services. Cash letter Services: Number of checks offset in average per month: 984.322 thousands. Amount handled in million Argentine pesos in average per month: ARS $ 9,886. Alternative Channels: Automatic Teller Machines (cash dispensers and self-service terminals). - Automatic Teller Machines: 589. - 5th Bank as regards the number of automatic teller machines among Private Banks and 7th if public banks are included. - Self-Service Terminals: 465 - 5.742153 million transactions in average per month adding those of Automatic Teller Machines and Self-service Terminals, which is equivalent to 11.02% more than in the previous Fiscal Year. - AR$ 7,125 million pesos in transactions performed through Automatic Teller Machines and Self-service Terminals (including Withdrawals, Deposits and Transfers). Corporate Internet Banking and Retail Internet Banking. - Total of registered users: 248.528 thousands. - Number of transactions processed in average per month: 1.391091 million. - Average volume in million pesos of monthly transactions: AR$ 8,686. - Website and E-commerce. - 1.9 million individuals in average enter monthly into the web site www.bancocredicoop.coop Telephone Contact Center Credicoop Responde [Credicoop Answers]. - Input calls monthly average: 514 thousands. - ISO 9001/2008 Certification issued by IRAM for the services of phone assistance, comercialisation, advising and response. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 81 Quality Certifications CERTIFICACIONES DE CALIDAD Since its beginnings, Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado has given Quality a substantial importance. In fact, this entity’s Mission itslef states “Our main task is to provide efficient and high-quality financial services to our Members.” Based on the aforementioned, and with the conviction that “efficiency and democracy are not incompatible terms”, “Quality” was determined to become one of the Bank´s strategic topics, in order to contribute to the achievement of the challenging objectives as set. QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM In such sense, we have been granted Quality Certifications by prestigious national and international organizations auditing these standards, which we will referred to below: Thus, the introduction of a Quality Risk System was determined to ensure the integral and permanent treatment of the conditions linked to these concepts in order to: Ensure that the Bank’s products and services comply with the requirements demanded by Members, the competence and the external regulations; Create a methodology of continuous improvement as a process of permanent overcoming. Then, it was decided to use the guidelines proposed by the ISO 9001:2008 Standards, a set of international standards and good practices for management. This methodology has been already applied to the following processes: Follow-up of mail items. Advanced payment for goods imports. Services of phone, comercialisation, advice and response from the Phone Contact Center. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 83 The later two services have been re-certified under the ISO 9001:2008 standards by IRAM (Argentine Institute of Standardization and Certification) in November, 2012. It is proper to highlight that the Certification is nationally and internationally recognized and means that a third party body ensures that Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado has objectively shown accordance with quality standards. Likewise, the Quality Management System is under the implementation for: Salaries Plan – Payroll through Corporate Internet Banking. Payment Orders from Overseas. Assistance and Resolution of Claims. INTERNAL AUDIT Likewise, in November 2012, the Internal Audit Management Department obtained the Quality Certification from the Instituto de Auditores Internos de Argentina (IAIA) [Argentina’s Internal Auditors Institute]. This recognition, with international scope, has implied the complete assessment of procedures used and reveals their adherence to the International Rules for the professional practice, as well as the compliance with efficiency and efficacy standards in the specific matter. BANCO CREDICOOP 84 QUALITY CERTIFICATIONS IN COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT - INTERNATIONAL COOPERATIVE ALLIANCE FOR THE AMERICAS - ICA AMERICAS In October 2012, the International Cooperative Alliance for the Americas –ICA Americas– granted Banco Credicoop Cooperativo Limitado the international quality certification in Cooperative Social Responsibility Report pertinent to its first Cooperative Social Responsibility Report for the Fical-Social year elapsed between July 1, 2011 and June 30, 2012. Such certification was granted as a consequence of assessing its acts as regards the compliance with the Cooperative Principles and in accordance with the model suggested by the International Cooperative Alliance for the Americas framed within the concept of Cooperative Social Responsibility approved by such international body. COOPERATIVE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REPORT 2013 85 Registered under BCRA 1.4.028 INAES 8945. Member of Instituto Movilizador de Fondos Cooperativos. Reconquista 484, (C1003ABJ) Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, Argentine Republic. Phone (5411) 4320-5000 www.bancocredicoop.coop