Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Agric and Rural Development Journalists Association says it is expecting the Agriculture Infrastructure and Warehouses and Markets programme to help address the challenges of price volatility and post-harvest losses.
According to the Association, such developments are due in part to the pressure on farmers to sell their produce immediately after harvesting, where food is in abundance and cheap on the market.
“But there are still more to be done for the nation to achieve full value of agriculture, particularly in the area of poultry and livestock. Ghana’s domestic supply of broiler meat is just 10 percent, whiles the remaining 90 percent is imported," it said in a statement.
“Our interaction with poultry and livestock farmers reveals that Ghana cannot boast of any serious dairy production and that all the milk intake, ice creams, and yoghurt are produced from imported milk, despite the existing vast potential in the country,” the Association added.
Below is the statement:
STATEMENT ON THE 33RD NATIONAL FARMERS’ DAY CELEBRATION
It has been 33 years already since Ghana began to celebrate and honour her gallant farmers, fishers and agricultural workers for their hard work in feeding the nation. It is called the National Farmers’ Day, a day that is observed on the first Friday of December to acknowledge the important position farmers and fishers occupy in the nation’s socio-economic development.
The fundamental objective of the celebration is basically to motivate people in the Agric sector to improve on productivity in order for Ghana to continuously feed her population, provide raw materials to industries and contribute substantially to the country’s development.
There is no gainsaying that agriculture remains the economic base for majority of the poor in the country and constitutes a key economic sector, providing livelihoods for many.
It has been said time and again that agricultural performance is central in driving socio-economic transformation largely in rural Ghana. The sector provides numerous employment opportunities, and this is why investment in the sector will be worthwhile.
It is against this backdrop that members of the Ghana Agriculture and Rural Development Journalists Association are backing government’s intention to set up a National Development Bank to purposefully support investment in the agriculture and manufacturing sectors.
We also acknowledge Government’s policy direction and interventions - planting for food and jobs as well as the Agricultural Infrastructure Warehouses and Markets programme – to serve as incentives to get young people into agriculture and ensure improved production.
It is our expectation that the Agriculture Infrastructure and Warehouses and Markets programme will help address the challenges of price volatility and post-harvest losses that are due in part to the pressure on farmers to sell their produce immediately after harvesting, where food is in abundance and cheap on the market.
But there are still more to be done for the nation to achieve the full value of agriculture, particularly in the area of poultry and livestock. Ghana’s domestic supply of broiler meat is just 10 percent, whiles the remaining 90 percent is imported.
Our interaction with poultry and livestock farmers reveals that Ghana cannot boast of any serious dairy production and that all the milk intake, ice creams, and yoghurt are produced from imported milk, despite the existing vast potential in the country.
As one industrial player put it, “The poultry, aquaculture and livestock industry will provide a substantial base for employment and development in Ghana if Government shows commitment in the sector.”
As a nation, we need to make local producers competitive over imported chickens by giving them soft loans – between zero to 10 percent interest rate than the current 35 to 40 percentage rate that continuously holds them down.
Government in 2014 launched a Broiler Revitalisation Programme with the intention of reducing poultry imports by 40 percent, but the programme failed because local producers had to contend with cheap imports.
For us as journalists, we believe that a comprehensive agriculture development programme that will respond to all the sectors of the agriculture industry for positive and sustainable growth is the way forward.
We need to improve livelihoods and ensure food security, eliminate hunger and reduce poverty through agriculture, improve agriculture research, technology dissemination and adoption, and strengthen capacity for agribusinesses as well as improve access to information on Agric strategies and their implementation.
There is also the need for the nation to promote trade-related capacity building to enhance our market access and adopt productivity-enhancing practices in order to achieve targets set.
While we are about it, let us also request Government to consider the idea of constructing 20-kilometre road each year to farming communities, promote consumption of local rice to an acceptable level, devote a greater part of the annual budget to the agriculture sector, whiles our chiefs make farmland available for use.
On this special occasion, we take this opportunity to salute our farmers and fishers for their continuous support to food security and contribution to the economy.
Long live our farmers!
Long live Ghana!!
Signed:
Mr. Ernest Kofi Adu Mr. Richmond Frimpong
General Secretary President
Latest Stories
-
Partey visa ban: We are racing against time – Ablakwa reveals barely 48hrs to Ghana’s opener
4 hours -
DHLTU’s Open Day and Mini Trade Fair: When classrooms turn into marketplaces
4 hours -
Stranded tricycle waste collectors threaten to offload trash at unauthorised locations in Kumasi
4 hours -
Upper West minister challenges DHLTU leaders to excel at SRC Week 2026 launch
4 hours -
Office of Government Machinery not burdened by political appointees — Kwakye Ofosu replies Damongo MP
5 hours -
US Air Force B-52 bomber plane crashes after take off in California
5 hours -
SpaceX IPO raised $10bn more than thought
5 hours -
Heroic Cabo Verde clinch draw with Spain
5 hours -
Parents of 24 Ghanata SHS students agree to pay GH¢5,200 over alleged food theft by their wards
5 hours -
Kasapreko PLC lists on GSE, opens new chapter for growth
6 hours -
AI strategy key to positioning Ghana as leader in responsible AI development – Bandim Abed-Nego
6 hours -
Damongo MP urges CSOs to probe true cost of Mahama’s government
6 hours -
Ministerial numbers alone do not reveal government size – Samuel Jinapor
6 hours -
Ghana’s flooding problem caused by years of poor attitudes and weak enforcement – Researcher
6 hours -
Two diesel trailers collide at Kwahu Hwidiem
6 hours