(Togo First) - The Togolese government and its partners updated and adapted legal texts on governance and contract farming early last week. The revision aims to strengthen the interprofessions of the maize, cassava, soybean, pineapple, and mango sectors.
It will soon lead to an interministerial order on the regulation, control, and monitoring of activities in these five value chains, along with the drafting of implementing texts for the decree on the structuring and recognition of professional and interprofessional organizations.
Togo previously lacked a law governing agricultural interprofessional bodies, a legal gap that stakeholders say has limited business opportunities across value chain segments. This is especially the case for the sectors targeted by the Program to Promote Private Sector Competitiveness in Togo (ProComp), namely maize, cassava, mango, soybean, and pineapple.
According to Bouab Kpanté, Director of Agricultural Entrepreneurship and Financing (DEFA), these texts provide an essential legal and institutional tool for interprofessional governance. They will also enable the European Union and Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), co-financiers of ProComp, to further support the structuring and functioning of these organizations.
This update, expected to result in a reorganization of interprofessions, plays a strategic role in agricultural development. It comes as the country enters a new phase of its agricultural policy, which requires strengthening the identity of interprofessions to mobilize financing and support producers, particularly through contract farming.