News › General News       08.07.2016

Agric Extension Services necessary for agric modernization – PFAG, SEND-Ghana

Two farmer-based organisations say Ghana's quest for modernised agriculture would remain illusory if the authorities continue to neglect extension services.

The Peasant Farmers Association of Ghanan and SEND-Ghana say farmers across the country urgently need the guidance and support of extension officers to adopt modern techniques of agriculture.

The two organisations said in a statement issued in Accra.

They are calling on the political parties contesting this year's elections to make adequate provisions in their manifestos on how to improve the extension-farmer ratio.

Read the full statement below:
Agricultural modernization has been the focus of government and captured inGhana Shared Growth and Development Agenda (GSGDA) II, 2014-2017 and also in both Food and Agricultural Sector Policy (FASDEP I & II) as the solution to transform the agricultural sector to accelerate growth.

This will quicken the pace towards full domestic food security, increased agricultural exports, improvement in farm incomes, production of raw materials for value addition through processing, generation of employment and alleviation of poverty.

According to research conducted by Peasant Farmers and SEND- Ghana, this dream will remain a mirage, if attention is not given to the drivers of this change who are the Agricultural Extension Services. “Unfortunately, due to poor extension services, the aim of modernizing the sector to propel growth had not been achieved”. The Programme Officer of Peasant Farmers indicated.

According to them available statistics from the Ministry of Food and Agriculture shows that the national farmer-extension ratio stands at 1 Agricultural Extension Agent (AEA) to 1,500 farmers (1:1500) (MoFA). However, research conducted by the organisations shows that; there is 1 AEA to 3000 farmers (1:3000). According to the Programme Officer of SEND Ghana; the situation is compounded by lack of the right combination of logistics such as motor bikes, computers and information for the few AEAs to discharge their duties effectively. Besides, extension officers are ill-incentivised in Ghana, especially those working in very deprived and hard-to-reach communities resulting in demoralised, scarce and unproductive extension service agents.

According to them, the consequences of poor extension services delivery to smallholder farmers brought in its trail characteristic poor agronomic practices; post-harvest management challenges; inefficient use of inputs; abuse of pesticides; low adaptive capacity for research and technology uptake; and inadequate access to auxiliary information that could help increase agricultural productivity in Ghana

They are calling on all political parties as part of their 2016 manifestoes to the agricultural sector to be bold and resist external forces to continue placing embargo in the recruitment of extension officers. How can you invest in building more agricultural training colleagues, producing average of 600 extension officers every year yet you refused to employ them? They also call on government to increase investment in agricultural extension services by purchasing more motor bikes, proving extension staff with the needed logistic to operate with and also ensure there is proper extension research linkages.

They called on government to also empower CSIR with enough resources to enable them disseminate research products to farmers and also research for more important products that addresses the needs of farmers. This is the only way the aim agricultural modernization can come to fruition they concluded

Below are some of their policy recommendation

  1. Extension human resources management
  1. Promoting Demand-drive research and extension services
  1. Supporting and resourcing the policy framework
  1. Clarity on Standards for Private Extension Service Delivery
  1. Mal-functioning Farmer-Based Organizations (FBOs);
  1. Where to find the Resources
  1. A functioning Research –Extension - Farmer – Linkages - Committees (RELCs)

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