Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) says the new cocoa crop season will be opened with its proposed self-financing plan without the usual syndicated loan facilities.
Finance Minister, Dr. Amin Adam earlier indicated that the government will be seeking external funding to support the cocoa sector.
But Chief Executive of Cocobod, Joseph Boahen Aidoo, says the Board will be combining the new purchasing regime with loan syndications if necessary in anticipation of an effective implementation of the self-financing transition.
“Once you have an existing module, you can combine that module with the new one. I believe that if it works Ghana will go with that module going forward. But we are starting the season with self-financing,” he said.
He continued: “we used that module during the large season from June to the end of August and it has worked. But, we want to scale it. If we are blending not borrowing with borrowing I don’t think it should become an issue”.
The Chief Executive Officer of COCOBOD has been meeting farmers from seventy cocoa-growing districts across the country.
The stakeholder consultative dialogue aimed at fostering Ghana’s cocoa sector which has in recent years been fraught with financial and environmental challenges.
Mr. Boahen Aidoo highlighted plans to transition from Ghana’s 32-year-old syndicated loan regime to a self-financing system.
“We used the syndication module to buy and ship cocoa where the monies were paid to the bank accounts of the lenders but this time we want the monies to be paid to us directly. So this time when we ship the overseas buyers will pay the dollars to us directly,” he said.
He believes the new system would help ease pressure on the local currency.
“So we are going to have steady, consistent in-flow of the dollars until of waiting until one particular day and the money comes in bulk and everyone wants to hurriedly change to the dollar. This would ease the depreciating cedi”.
Meanwhile, President Akufo-Addo is expected to announce new pricing for the 2024/25 cocoa season which will be opened on September 10, 2024.
Already, some sources are hinting at a nearly 45% upward adjustment of the prices.
With an increasing cost of farming and adverse implications of illegal mining activity in the cocoa sector, the farmers want an attractive price.
“Looking at how we suffer the government must present us with at least 6,000 cedis new price,” a farmer said.
Mr. Boahen Aidoo is assuring of a better pricing regime that would boost the incomes and livelihoods of farmers.
Latest Stories
-
Young African professionals urged to drive innovation to build a resilient future
20 minutes -
Mary Addah says Office of Special Prosecutor was flawed from day one
30 minutes -
Education is a fundamental enabler for achieving all SDGs – Mahama
41 minutes -
Cecilia Dapaah, Ofori-Atta cases ‘entrenched distrust’ in OSP – Mary Addah
56 minutes -
A dangerous experiment – Sam Okudzeto questions foundation of OSP
1 hour -
Corruption is still everywhere – Sam Okudzeto says OSP missed its mission
2 hours -
Scrap it – Sam Okudzeto says Special Prosecutor’s office has achieved nothing
2 hours -
Golden Globes 2026: The full list of nominees
3 hours -
DiCaprio’s One Battle After Another leads Golden Globe nominations
3 hours -
New mpox strain identified in England
3 hours -
Why has Paramount launched a hostile bid for Warner Bros Discovery?
3 hours -
White South Africans divided on US refugee offer
3 hours -
Australia’s social media ban for children has left big tech scrambling
3 hours -
Trump gives Nvidia green light to sell advanced AI chips to China
4 hours -
Dozens injured after magnitude 7.5 quake strikes northern Japan
4 hours
