Smallholder
farmers and actors along the country’s agricultural value chain look set to
rake-in more returns on their investments following launch of the Ghana
Commodities Exchange Project.
The Exchange
is a common market for trading local commodities in a transparent and uniform
manner with a view of improving the livelihoods and profitability of the most
dominant sector in the national economy.
President
John Dramani Mahama, who launched the project in Accra, said the initiative is
a positive step toward achieving government’s vision of a revitalised agric
sector that will help support efforts at boosting and diversifying the
country’s export trade, as well as maximise the huge potential of the sector as
a key economic trigger.
“Agric is
a dominant sector of the economy that offers informal employment to the vast
majority of the country’s population; and that is why we need a platform that
is backed by a warehouse receipt system as a springboard for national economic
growth and prosperity.
“This
project will repress the pain of the country’s economic transition process as
it will move the economy from import-driven to export-driven; formalise the
agric trading activities and sanitise commercial activities in the sector to
attract investments and boost productivity,” he said.
President
Mahama said the project is a response to tackle the myriad challenges facing
smallholder farmers and associated value chain actors, as it will curb the
perennial issues of post-harvest losses and access to capital.
“Government
recognises the agric sector’s viability to push socio-economic growth, and we
anticipate that this project will transform the lives of farmers, stakeholders
along the value chain and the Ghanaian economy as a whole through sector
productivity and profitability,” he said.
The
project, which is expected to be fully operational by the first half of next
year, has been touted to transform the country’s agricultural landscape and
also champion the cause of smallholder farmers who contribute significantly to
national development.
Food and Agriculture
Minister Fiifi Kwetey said the initiative is just what the sector requires to
fully explore and transform
“The main
factor limiting the economic potential of the agric sector is lack of a common
market that will boost the trust and confidence of farmers, as well as
financial institutions to invest extensively in the sector toward economic
growth.
“Through
this project, agro-processors and sector actors along the value chain will have
a reliable supply of quality commodities to push the quest for value addition
to local raw materials,” he said.
The GCX
Project is a public private partnership deal between government and a private
sector financing consortium comprised of credible domestic and global
institutional investors: Ecobank Ghana Limited; GCB Bank Limited; London-based
private equity fund, 8 Miles Fund; and the International Finance Corporation
(IFC).
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