The Argentine Agribusiness Council is pushing for a package of laws to promote employment and boost exports, in a political context that they consider more favorable.
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December 11 will not only mark the beginning of a new political stage in Argentina, but also the possibility of agriculture once again taking a central place on the legislative agenda. In this context, the Argentine Agribusiness Council (CAA), which groups together more than 60 chambers and 35 value chains, is preparing to push a package of projects that—according to its representatives—can transform the country's productive structure. "We have an extraordinary opportunity" to push the laws that the agribusiness sector needs, affirmed Gustavo Idígoras, president of the Oil Industry Chamber (CIARA-CEC) and one of the main spokespersons for the CAA, during the event of the Chamber of Vegetables of the Argentine Republic (CLERA), which celebrated its 50th anniversary at the Buenos Aires Grain Exchange. "The citizens voted thinking of a federal, productive, and exporting country, and this is the practical way to bring that to reality," he maintained. In several recent interviews, ...
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