The
Ghana Agricultural Producers and Trader’s Organisation, (GAPTO), the leading advocate in the
agriculture sector has held a stakeholder workshop to help implement policies
that will improve access to funding to farmers.
Participants
at the workshop were drawn from representatives and leaders of small holder
farmer groups nationwide as well as government and relevant Ministries,
Department And Agencies (MDAs) to discuss policy recommendations, and agreement
reached on the way forward to remove barriers to access to funding
of agriculture activities.
The workshop, organised in Accra
with support from the Business Sector Advocacy Challenge, (BUSAC) fund was
under the theme: ‘How to improve access to funding to operators in the
agricultural sector.’
The
objectives of the programme among others was to equip and support members of
GAPTO in effective advocacy skills to enable them influence policy and action
of those in the public sector.
It
was also to help members of GAPTO better appreciate business sector advocacy,
the processes involved in influencing decision making and its implications for
the associations.
It
was also targeted at persuading the government and other relevant MDAs to
develop and implement policies that will help to remove barriers to access
funding in the agricultural sector, as well as to collaborate with policymakers
and insurance companies to come out with insurance policies for the
agricultural sector into reduce risks associated with the sector.
Alhaji
Haruna Agesheka, the Secretary General of the GAPTO speaking at the stakeholder
workshop proposed that financial institutions should collaborate with
government to find out how some of this risks can be minimized and mitigated,
as this will make lending to farmers in particular more attractive to the
various banks within the country. Financial products should be designed
specifically for those within the agricultural sector.
Alhaji
Agesheka called for the formation of farmer based organisations such as GAPTO
in various farming communities to enable them to become more credit worthy and
presentable to the financial institutions which will position the cost of
borrowing funds to be cheaper for the farmers.
“The
formation of a credit union by GAPTO members may be a step in the right direction.
A typical example of well structured credit union is that of credit agricole
which has it’s head quarters in France,” he said.
The
agriculture sector employs about 60 percent direct and indirectly of the total
work force in the country and about 25% to the country's gross domestic
products (GDP), the sector also provides the bulk of raw materials to industry,
and it is the main sector that can guarrantee the country's food security.
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