Mwanza
— The government has announced a new payment system for cotton farmers
as one of the steps towards overhauling the sub-sector that employs
about 500,000 farmers across the country.
Under the new
system - which was formally announced by Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa
on
Wednesday - farmers will be required to open a bank account into
which their payments will be made.
This is how payments are routinely made to cashew nut farmers in Mtwara, Lindi, Ruvuma, Coast and Tanga Regions.
However, it will be a novelty for cotton farmers who are used to being paid cash on the barrelhead for their produce.
Prime Minister
Majaliwa informed stakeholders in the cotton industry that other cash
crop farmers will also be paid through the same system.
Under the new
system, Agricultural Marketing Co-operative Societies (Amcos) will be
responsible for coordinating the buying and selling processes on behalf
of their members.
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"The government
will take the responsibility of convincing the banks to facilitate
banking operations for farmers," said the premier.
Mr Majaliwa said
that the electronic payment system will guarantee financial security for
both farmers and traders, as they will no longer need to carry cash
with them.
The meeting was
attended by the deputy minister for Agriculture, Mr Innocent Bashungwa
who said that cotton production this season is expected to reach 450,000
kilos compared with 222,000 kilos in the last harvest season.
Mr Marko Mtunga,
the Tanzania Cotton Board (TCB) director general, said the board is
implementing a number of strategies intended to increase cotton
production in the country. The goal, he revealed, is to reach
800-to-1,200 kilos an acre, up from the current production of 200-300
kilos.
However, the
Itilima District agricultural officer in Simiyu Region, Mateso Paul,
told The Citizen over the 'phone that the newly-instituted electronic
mode of payment will not readily go down well with many farmers -
especially considering the nature of the exercise.
He said cotton
could not be compared with tea or cashew nuts as these two cash crops
take long to market. This is unlike cotton, whereby farmers sell their
produce immediately after harvesting. Processing of their payment after
every sale would have many complications.
Initially, farmers
signed contracts with prospective buyers who then provided them with
inputs, including pesticides. This modality was later halted by
government which said it was adversely affecting farmers' incomes, while
unduly benefiting the buying companies.
A cotton farmer in
Misungwi District, Elikana Elia, said there was no standardized mode of
cotton farming which would force farmers to open new bank accounts every
harvesting season. He also expressed concern that the system could be
to the disadvantage of unschooled farmers.
According to Prime
Minister Majaliwa, cotton production in the 2018/2019 harvest season was
222,000 tonnes - an amount that is projected to reach 450,000 tonnes in
the next harvest season.
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