Kuwait Times

Ghana raises cocoa price by 45% to deter smuggling

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ACCRA: Ghana’s government on Wednesday announced a 45-percent increase in the producer price of cocoa for the 2024/2025 crop season, in a bid to curb smuggling. The policy is also designed to improve the welfare of cocoa farmers as the new season begins, said Agricultur­e Minister Bryan Acheampong. The new price, effective from Wednesday, raises the payment for a 64-kilogramme bag of cocoa beans to $192, up from $132. That brings the farm gate price to $3,063 per ton, a 129-percent increase from the opening price of $1,335 per ton for the 2023/2024 season.

“This is an unpreceden­ted increase of 129.36 percent,” Acheampong said as he announced the increase Wednesday. “This appreciabl­e increment in the producer price of cocoa signifies the government’s commitment to improve the sector and the livelihood­s of the Ghanaian cocoa farmer.” The price rise follows a mid-season adjustment last year when the government raised prices from $1,335 per ton to $2,113 per ton in response to soaring internatio­nal cocoa prices. New York cocoa futures have recently surged above $7,000 per ton due to poor harvests in Ghana and Ivory Coast, the world’s top producers. Farmers in these countries however often receive much lower prices, set by their government­s. Experts suggest that increasing the farm gate price could lower the incentive for illegal cross-border sales, allowing farmers to reinvest in their cocoa farms, thus potentiall­y easing the global supply shortfall. Ghana’s cocoa harvest has declined in recent years due to weather challenges, disease, inadequate inputs, and smuggling.

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