Audio By Carbonatix
Yesterday's announcement by the Finance Minister, Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson, and the NDC government regarding cocoa pricing is a political theatre.
The grand claims of delivering US$5,040 per tonne—representing 70% of an alleged US$7,200 Free-On-Board (FOB) value—are deliberate distortions that offer no real benefit to Ghanaian cocoa farmers.
The truth is simple: the NDC government is manipulating figures to deceive farmers while pocketing the difference.
Truth Check: Exchange Rate Manipulation
- At the Bank of Ghana interbank market, the mid-rate for USD/GHS as of August 4, 2025, stands at GHS 10.51 per US$1 (Buying 10.5047, Selling 10.5153).
- Yet, the Ministry has intentionally quoted an average exchange rate of GHS 10.25, downplaying the cedi’s depreciation to make their numbers look favourable.
- This under-quotation alone reduces real income to cocoa farmers by at least GHS 1.3 per dollar, translating into approximately GHS 6,000 per tonne lost.
This is not a mistake—it is an orchestrated attempt to cheat cocoa farmers under the guise of delivering a “good price.”
World Cocoa Price Is not US$7,200 — It’s Much Higher
- The actual global cocoa price is hovering around US$8,400 per tonne (June 2025 average).
- Cocoa futures and spot markets have traded as high as US$10,000+ per tonne since the global cocoa crisis began in 2024.
- Dr. Forson’s claim of a US$7,200 FOB is therefore not only inaccurate but a deliberate attempt to lower the benchmark, so the government’s 70% figure appears inflated.
The truth is clear: this government is cherry-picking a low FOB figure to create a false sense of generosity.
Real Farmer Payout Falls Short — The Hard Numbers.
Minister’s Claim
US$5,040 per tonne producer price
Actual Market Data
World price ≈ US $8,400/t
Impact on Farmers
Real share: ≈ 60%, not promised 70%
Exchange rate used: GHS 10.25/USD
Official rate: GHS 10.51/USD
Farmers lose roughly GHS 6,000 per tonne
- Using the true exchange rate of GHS 10.51, the price of US$5,040 should convert to approximately GHS 52,900 per tonne, not GHS 51,660 as stated by the Minister.
- Worse still, when aligned with the actual world price of US$8,400, the US$5,040 payout represents barely 60%, not the 70% farmers were promised.
In essence, the Finance Minister’s figures are a statistical mirage, designed to deceive hardworking cocoa farmers who deserve far more.
My Message to Cocoa Farmers and Fellow Citizens
- This government is playing fast and loose with numbers—manipulating FOB figures and exchange rates to create a false narrative of generosity.
- Farmers deserve transparency, not spin. With global prices nearing US$8,400–10,000 per tonne, paying farmers only US$5,040 is a massive shortchange.
- True leadership would peg farmer compensation to actual global benchmarks, not invent low figures to give the illusion of fulfilling promises.
Minister’s Quotes, Deconstructed
“This increase… represents 70% of the gross Free-On-Board value of $7,200 per tonne.”
“At an average exchange rate of GHS10.25… producer price rises to GHS51,660 per tonne.”
Both statements are built on fabricated assumptions—a suppressed USD/GHS exchange rate and an arbitrarily low FOB price of US$7,200. The facts are undeniable:
- The actual global cocoa price stands at US$8,400 per tonne, well above the government’s quoted figure.
- The official interbank exchange rate is GHS 10.51, not GHS 10.25.
These are not clerical errors; they are calculated moves to deprive cocoa farmers of their rightful earnings.
My Call to Action for Dr. Ato Forson and the NDC Government
- Publish the full cocoa pricing data immediately, including real-time futures market values and forward contracts.
- Adjust the exchange rate assumptions—payouts to farmers must reflect the current mid-rate of GHS 10.51, not the doctored GHS 10.25.
- Commit to transparent and publicly audited contracts, ensuring cocoa farmers see the true value of their labour.
Under this administration, cocoa farmers continue to bear the brunt of political propaganda. A payment of US$5,040 per tonne is not a favour—it’s a shortchange masked in statistical deception. Worse, the misuse of exchange rate assumptions strips even more value from farmers’ pockets.
I am calling for real transparency, not government illusions. Cocoa is Ghana’s economic backbone. Its producers deserve more than half-truths dressed up as generosity.
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