Audio By Carbonatix
Farmers who cultivate crops and forest tree production on two acres and below still dominate the agriculture sector, the Ghana Census of Agriculture (GCA) 2017/18, has revealed.
The study said in the year 1970 the percentage of these proportion of farmers stood at 35 per cent but however increased to 56 per cent in the 2017/18 census.
Government Statistician, Professor Samuel K. Annim, who disclosed this during the opening of a dissemination workshop of GCA, said more than half of people active in the sector were old.
The study, according to him showed that agricultural activities in the country still remained rural and rudimentary with little innovation and modernisation.
“Most agricultural holders use traditional tools and equipment for production whereas the use of modern tools and equipment such as tractors, shellers, power tillers, hatchery/incubator, meat processing equipment and milking equipment are negligible,” he said.
“While fertilizer is not used by most holders, the use of pesticides is highly prevalent among holders. Crop cultivation is predominantly dependent on rain and mortality in livestock is high,” he added.
He noted that the study showed the educational level of people engaged in the agriculture sector was either up to basic education or no education with only 13 per cent of holders attaining secondary or higher levels of education.
“With these low education among farmers, it will not fuel the growth of the sector because there is the need to adopt and apply modern technology. We are still engaged in rain-fed but need to move to go beyond that,” he said.
The study, he said revealed that many people owned farmlands in the year 1970 than in 2018.
Prof Annim said there was the need for the financial sector to develop special long-term loan schemes to meet the needs of different categories of farmers and agriculture activities.
“Currently most financial institution does not take into consideration the gestation period of different activities. Going forward our financial institutions need to design packages for cassava, cocoa, rice, maize…” he said.
Such a credit package, he explained would attract the youth to engage in agriculture and grow the sector to reflect the phrase of “making the sector the backbone of the economy”.
Prof. Annim noted that the mangers of the country’s education needed to develop programmes in agriculture that would be practically based and linked to employment after completion.
He said study served as a baseline to access policies including Planting for Food and Jobs, Building of Wear Housing, how it integrates with the one-district-one-factory and in the next National Census of Agriculture in the year 2024.
Mr. Kingsley Agyei Boahene, the Central Regional Coordinating Director, said the findings of the GCA were critical for policymakers to better identify, prepare, implement and evaluate development projects aimed at enhancing agriculture in Ghana.
He said the sector now had up-to-date and reliable agriculture statistics for programming and monitoring food security and livelihood programmes, among others.
Mr Boahen said the provision of data on the structure of agriculture in the country, was vital to the rebasing of Ghana’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
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