Audio By Carbonatix
Africa’s cocoa producers, including Ghana, will see only limited economic gains from structurally higher global cocoa prices.
According to Fitch Solutions, the feedthrough of higher international prices to local farmers will also remain limited.
“While international cocoa prices will remain structurally higher in the years to come, we think that African producers will not capture the full benefits".
Prices averaged US$8,900/tonne in the first seven months of 2025, more than triple the 2005-2023 average of US$2,500/tonne, caused largely by climate-related supply disruptions in West Africa that led to three consecutive years of global cocoa deficits. "Although our Agribusiness team projects prices to ease to an average of US$6,900/tonne over 2026-2030, they will remain well above the long-term average as global stocks recover only gradually”, Fitch Solutions mentioned.
It added that structurally higher cocoa prices are unlikely to deliver a major windfall for African producers.
“Our view that structurally higher cocoa prices will not create major economic windfalls for Africa's cocoa-producing nations in the coming years rests on three key factors that we outline below”, the UK-based firm pointed out.
First, it said the feedthrough of higher international prices to local farmers will remain limited.
The world’s two largest cocoa producers - Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana - set farmgate prices through government-run marketing boards. While both countries have raised farmgate prices in recent seasons and are likely to maintain them at elevated levels, the gap between farmgate and international prices remains wide.
“This reflects the fiscal and operational constraints of national marketing boards, which limit the extent to which governments can pass on global price gains to farmers. As a result, although cocoa farmers in Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana will see improved incomes, they are unlikely to capture the full upside of high market prices, limiting the broader impact on household consumption and domestic demand”, it alluded.
It continued that farmgate prices will remain far below market prices, limiting upside to farmer incomes.
Price Gap to Fuel Smuggling
Second, it said the persistent price gap will fuel smuggling from Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana to neighbouring markets and limit the positive impact of high prices on their external accounts.
“As Ivorian and Ghanaian farmers will be able to access higher prices in neighbouring countries that do not have government-set prices – such as Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Togo – we anticipate that smuggling activity will intensify. These neighbouring countries already show substantial export increases that cannot be explained by price movements alone, indicating that cocoa from Côte d'Ivoire and Ghana is being diverted across borders".
While this will bolster the export earnings of neighbouring economies, it stressed that this will deprive Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana of a key source of foreign exchange.
It added that whereas short-term risks associated with this are limited (due to elevated gold prices), and sustained cocoa smuggling will weaken the ability of Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana to absorb future external shocks.
Latest Stories
-
CDD-Ghana calls for national debate on campaign financing
11 minutes -
INTERPOL’s decision on Ofori-Atta: What it means for his U.S. bond hearing and the legal road ahead
23 minutes -
Parties can use filing fees to cover delegates’ costs, end vote-buying – Barker-Vormawor
27 minutes -
Boxing in Bukom: Five months without the bell
30 minutes -
Political parties can end vote-buying by disqualifying offenders – Barker-Vormawor
39 minutes -
Ministry of Gender investigates alleged sharing of intimate videos by foreign national
1 hour -
Cocoa must be treated as business, not politics- Nana Aduna II
2 hours -
Barker-Vormawor urges scrutiny of COCOBOD reforms, warns of continued debt burden
2 hours -
Prince Adu-Owusu: Beyond flowers and grand gestures — How do you want to be loved?
2 hours -
Multiple vehicles burnt as fuel tanker explodes on Nsawam-Accra highway
2 hours -
Former COCOBOD administration spent syndicated loans on themselves, not farmers – Inusah Fuseini
2 hours -
Mahama vows to end export of raw mineral ores by 2030, shifts focus to local processing
3 hours -
Mahama meets UN Chief, discusses African security & democracy.
3 hours -
Playback: Newsfile discussed cocoa crisis and election credibility in Ghana
3 hours -
Ghana stops cocoa Smuggling by narrowing price gap with neighbours – COCOBOD CEO
3 hours
