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CIA World Factbook 1981 (Internet Archive)

Togo

1981 Edition · 45 data fields

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Geography

Area

56,980 kmz; nearly one-half is arable, under 15% cultivated

Coastline

56 km

Fiscal year

calendar year

Land boundaries

1,646 km

Limits of territorial waters (claimed)

30 inn (fishing 200 nm; exclusive economic zone 200 nm)

Monetary conversion rate

Communaute Financiere Africaine 286 francs=US$l (1981)

People and Society

Ethnic divisions

37 tribes; largest and most important are Ewe in south and Cabrais in north; under 1% European and Syrian-Lebanese

Labor force

over 90% of population engaged in subsistence agriculture; about 30,000 wage earners, evenly divided between public and private sectors

Language

French, both official and language of commerce; major African languages are Ewe and Mina in the south and Dagomba and Kabie in the north

Literacy

54.9% of school age (7-14) currently in school

Nationality

noun — Togolese (sing, and pi.); adjective — Togolese

Organized labor

1 national union, the CNTT organized in 1972

Population

2,783,000 (July 1982), average annual growth rate 3.0%

Religion

about 20% Christian, 5% Muslim, 75% animist

Government

Branches

military government, with civilian-dominated Cabinet, took over on 14 April 1967, replacing provisional government created after January coup; no legislature; separate judiciary including State Security Court established

Capital

Lome

Communists

no Communist Party; possibly some sympathizers

Elections

presidential referendum of January 1972 elected Gen. Eyadema for indefinite period

Government leader

Gen. Gnassingbe EYADEMA, President, Minister of National Defense, and Armed Forces Chief of Staff

Legal system

based on French civil law and customary practice; no constitution; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction

Member of

AFDB, CEAO (observer), EAMA, EGA, ECOWAS, ENTENTE!, FAO, G-77, GATT, IBRD, ICAO, ICO, IDA, IFAD, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAU, OCAM, UN, UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTO

National holiday

Independence Day, 27 April

Official name

Republic of Togo

Political party

single party formed by President Eyadema in September 1969, Rally of the Togolese People (RPT), structure and staffing of party closely controlled by government

Political subdivisions

21 circumscriptions

Suffrage

universal adult

Type

republic; under military rule since January 1967

Economy

Agriculture

main cash crops — coffee, cocoa, cotton; major food crops — yams, cassava, corn, beans, rice, millet, sorghum, fish; must import some foodstuffs

Budget

(1980), revenues, $294.41 million; current expenditures, $277.77 million, development expenditures $16.63

Electric power

75,000 kW capacity (1980); 188 million kWh produced (1980), 71 kWh per capita

Exports

$384.3 million (c.i.f., 1980); phosphates, cocoa, coffee, and palm kernels

Fishing

catch 2,000 metric tons (1979)

GNP

$1,200 million (1980), about $462 per capita; -2.0% real growth in 1980

Imports

$536.2 million (c.i.f., 1980); consumer goods, fuels, machinery, tobacco, foodstuffs

Major industries

phosphate mining, agricultural processing, handicrafts, textiles, beverages

Major trade partners

mostly with France and other EC countries

Communications

Airfields

11 total, 11 usable; 2 with permanent-surface runways 2,440-3,659 m

Civil air

1 major transport aircraft

Highways

7,000 km total; 1,320 km paved, 1,280 km improved earth, remainder unimproved earth

Inland waterways

section of Mono River and about 50 km of coastal lagoons and tidal creeks

Military budget

for fiscal year ending 31 December 1981, $20.8 million; 8.5% of central government budget SOLOMON ISLANDS ij A kit i ATI t VANUATU NEV\N' CALEDONIA Fjl .WESTERN

Military inanpowe'r

males 15-49, 600,000; 313,000 fit for military service; no conscription

Ports

1 major (Lome), 1 minor

Railroads

442 km meter gauge (1.00 m), single track

Telecommunications

fair system based on skeletal network of open-wire lines supplemented by a radio-relay route and radiocommunication stations; only center is Lome; 7,500 telephones (0.4 per 100 popl.); 2 AM, no FM, and 3 TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station and 1 SYMPHONIE station DEFENSE FORCES

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