The Citizen Watch Demands GHC9,000 As Farmgate Price For Cocoa Farmers

The Citizen Watch, one of the leading think tank groups in the country, is calling on the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, as a matter of urgency to scale up the farmgate price of cocoa beans to GHC9,000 per ton from the current GHC8,000 for cocoa farmers to save the industry from eminent collapse.

Cocoa beans export has been identified as the backbone of the economy and it would be very prudent for the government to sustain its operations rather than trying to collapse it.

According to the Citizen Watch, farmers have rejected the paltry sum of GHC8,000 per ton for cocoa beans that the Ghana Cocoa Board has agreed as the farmgate price.

“This is right because if a bag of cocoa beans on the international market sells at US$2,600 and the cedi to the dollar is hovering around GHC5.4, it means the total proceeds in cedi terms would be GHC14, 040. Farmers are to be paid 70 percent of the total proceeds, which would translate into GHC9828. So why the shortfall of GHC1828 on each tone of cocoa to cocoa farmers,” the statement said.

In a press release issued in Accra and signed by Francis Mensah, the Convener, the Citizen Watch is of the view that cocoa farmers are being cheated and is calling on the government to immediately intervene in the cocoa sector before it faces eminent collapse.

“What we expect the government to do is to provide the much needed incentive to these famers, since the country largely depends on their efforts in supporting our balance of payment and not to cripple the industry.”

“Even as the dollar is on the rise, the government is still paying such a paltry amount of money. We are calling on the government to act on this issue immediately before the worse happens,” it said.

The government raised the cocoa farmgate prices by 5.2% for the 2019/20 season, the first increase in four years, following strong sales of export contracts to chocolate makers and cocoa houses.

The farmgate price was increased to 8,000 Ghana cedis ($1,523.81) per tonne in the season starting in October, from 7,600 cedis per tonne last season.

The price has been unchanged for the past three seasons in Ghana, the world’s second-biggest cocoa producer.

But this increment has been rejected by the cocoa farmers in the country, describing it as a disincentive.

Ghana produced 794,000 tonnes of cocoa this season, down 11.7% from the last season.

Ghana and Ivory Coast joined forces in June to impose a floor price for cocoa of $2,600 per tonne and a live income differential (LID) of $400 per tonne. They have also been in talks for two years about simultaneously announcing their farmgate prices.

The two countries are also working together to set prices close enough to avoid cocoa smuggling on their border.
COCOBOD is set to sign its annual cocoa loan syndication deal with some 20 French banks in September 2019.

This was after it secured Parliament’s approval to borrow up to $1.5 billion to aid cocoa purchases for the 2019/2020 crop season.