Opinion › Feature Article       09.03.2017

2017 Budget; The Agric Sector In Perspective

The Writer

I had a great interview at Luv FM on the impressive and hope budget focusing specifically on the agricultural sector. Here are my few insights and perspectives on what could be done on the agric sector in order to deliver the development we seek as a nation:

“Planting for food and jobs campaign to some extent is inadequate without the provision of reliable and profitable market access for smallholders

Planting for food and jobs is undoubtedly a great campaign. We, as a nation must endeavor to increase our production. However, it is incumbent on us to provide and accelerate reliable and profitable market access for our cherished and hardworking smallholder farmers. Farmers do not just produce for food; they essentially produce to earn income. Normally, what we witness on the field is that, smallholders loss about 1/3 of their production due to the lack of readily available market access and storage facilities. In a typical community like Ejura in the Ashanti region of Ghana, mostly, all the farmers produce crops like cassava, maize and vegetables, then, there is a bumper harvest but nobody to buy. Prices drastically reduce and farmers who even want to wait hoping to get favorable prices loss everything at the end to rotten and wastage.

To improve the lives of our farmers, the government must also speed work on improving profitable market access for our farmers to meet the production. We must avoid the situation where our farmers produce for waste. And I think, the 1 district, 1 factory if done right and on time will help to reduce the effect of this challenge.

A century ago, mankind found most of the solutions to agriculture; the only challenge now is how to effectively and efficiently distribute these solutions to rural smallholders.

Widen the net of free fertilizer distribution project to 180,000tons is a giant step. This is expected to boost cocoa production or yield for this year. Ideally, our farmers are expected to harvest 16bags of cocoa per an acre but currently trailing around an average 2- 4 bags per an acre. So, ensuring effective distribution channels for the free fertilizer program will positively impact cocoa production significantly in Ghana. But before we jump into celebration about this, let ask ourselves, how much of the quantities of the free fertilizer written on paper, get into the smallholder farmer in the village and finally go down to the field, the cocoa farm.

The free fertilizer program currently has huge challenges with distribution and smallholder farmers’ access. From my interactions on the field, the following are the issues:

Now the question is, how much goes into extension service delivery at the district levels and the running of the various MoFA directorates. These offices are mostly under resourced and mostly, most of these extension officers lack funds for fuel and transport to do their works.

One key thing here is, the 93% budget allocation for Fertilizer Subsidy Programme exclusively targets the cocoa sector. So what happens to other commodities like rice, maize, sorghum, cassava and etc. All of them to share the remaining 7%, this is woefully inadequate. Why is cocoa sector given that priority? Cocoa has reliable and profitable market access.

So, I think, government should also give deserving attention to the non-cocoa sectors in the agriculture space.

Lastly, agriculture loan is also a success factor in this sector. It will also be great for government to commitment to advancing rural finance and credit access by smallholder farmers. Tackling these issues will revolutionize agriculture development in Ghana.

Schandorf Adu Bright
As Farmerline’s Director of Farmer Services, Schandorf manages a team of eight and he is responsible for leading training workshops for farmers, conducting user research, collecting data, advocating Farmerline’s initiatives, and monitoring and evaluating their impact. On behalf of Farmerline, Schandorf has trained more than 5,000 small-scale farmers to adopt and benefit from Farmerline’s voice messaging technology. Schandorf has rich experiences in rural financing.(Email: schandorf@farmerline.org)

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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