Audio By Carbonatix
COCOBOD’s Executive Management and Senior Staff have announced salary reductions for the remainder of the 2025/26 crop year, citing liquidity challenges in the cocoa industry.
In a statement issued Monday, February 16, 2026, COCOBOD said its Executive Management has taken a 20% pay cut, while Senior Staff have accepted a 10% salary reduction.
The institution said the move is part of a broader cost-cutting drive to reduce expenditure and align operational costs with revenue.
“The Executive Management and the Senior Staff of COCOBOD have, effective today, Monday, February 16, 2026, reduced their salaries for the remainder of the 2025/26 crop year in recognition of the current liquidity challenges in the cocoa industry,” the statement said.
COCOBOD added that the pay cuts, alongside other measures, are intended to ease pressure on its finances.

“This decision and other cost-cutting measures in procurement and a staff rationalisation exercise are aimed at reducing the overall expenditure of COCOBOD and aligning costs with revenue,” the statement added.
The announcement comes at a time when the cocoa sector is under growing strain, with rising operational costs, concerns over farmer welfare, and intensified public scrutiny over cocoa pricing and COCOBOD’s financial position.
In recent weeks, the cocoa industry has been at the centre of national debate, following tensions over producer prices and the broader sustainability of cocoa farming. Industry watchers have also pointed to the burden of financing cocoa purchases, operational costs, and the impact of global price volatility on revenue flows.
COCOBOD’s decision to cut salaries at the top is therefore being framed as an internal response to cash pressures affecting the sector, while management is pushing to contain costs through procurement reforms and workforce adjustments.
The statement, issued by the Chief Executive, did not provide details on the size of the liquidity gap or the amount of savings expected from the salary reductions.
However, it signals leadership's effort to demonstrate shared sacrifice as the institution pursues broader restructuring measures during the crop season.
COCOBOD also indicated that the salary cuts will remain in place until the end of the current crop year.
Latest Stories
-
One week observance for highlife legend Ebo Taylor takes place this Saturday in Saltpond
58 minutes -
Lamborghini Saga: EOCO boss has tarnished my brand and cost me business deals – Shatta Wale
4 hours -
Mugabe’s son drops bail request – what has happened to the family after losing power
4 hours -
Tyla deserved to win Grammy ahead of Nigerian artists – Joeboy
4 hours -
Ishmael Norman hails Interior Minister for choosing merit over politics in security recruitment
4 hours -
Iranian minister says country will not play in World Cup
5 hours -
No evidence Swiss bus fire was terrorism, officials say
5 hours -
Three brothers arrested after explosion at US embassy in Oslo
5 hours -
‘Disgusting but not surprising’: Domelevo demands dismissal, prosecution of officials in GH¢8.1bn audit rot
5 hours -
Nitiwul sounds alarm over Sokoto strike: Claims Ablakwa’s disclosure exposes Ghana to terror risk
5 hours -
Police arrest suspect for defilement, possession of child sexual abuse materials
6 hours -
Security services recruitment: Ntim Fordjour accuses Interior Ministry of milking over GH¢100m from applicants
6 hours -
Why risk protection is the unsung partner of growth for Ghana’s SMEs, households
6 hours -
New US ambassador to South Africa summoned over ‘undiplomatic remarks’
6 hours -
Three firms roll out AI-powered security platform for financial institutions
6 hours
