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Agric can best thrive with value addition measures – Sam Pyne

Hon Sam Pyne, Mayor of Kumasi handing over the prize to this year’s KMA best farmer.

The Mayor of Kumasi, Hon Samuel Pyne last week Friday at the joint Farmer’s Day Celebration between the Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly and the Ashanti Regional Coordinating Council (ARCC) at the Jubilee Park encouraged farmers to embrace other measures that could add value to the products they cultivate on their farms and animals they rear.

The Mayor said the theme for this year’s celebration “Accelerating Agricultural Development Through Value Addition” was appropriate since the country can only accelerate agricultural development by adding value to the items they grow and animals they tend.

“I find this theme very timeous and relevant due to the growing sophistication in tastes and demands across the globe”, the Mayor noted

He said for a sector that caters for a fifth of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the Ghanaian economy, it should not in any way be left wanting in the government’s developmental agenda. 

DETAILS:

Hon Pyne stated that the global economic growth has been speeding despite occasional hits by recessions and other factors.

He noted that if Ghana’s agricultural sector is to keep up with the pace, value-addition is imperative in that regard. 

The Mayor indicated that value-added agriculture entails changing a raw agricultural product into something new through packaging, processing, cooling, drying, extracting or any other type of process that differentiates the product from the original raw commodity. 

“Value addition generally focuses on production or manufacturing processes, marketing or services that increase the value of primary agricultural commodities, by increasing appeal to the consumer and the consumer’s willingness to pay a premium over similar but undifferentiated products”, the Mayor stated. 

CHARGE:

THE Kumasi Mayor said if Ghana was to take her rightful place as a major player in the global agricultural space, the way forward will be to move from a largely subsistence level to commercialised agriculture characterised by improved productivity and value addition. 

The Government of Ghana, the Mayor intimated has undertaken several programs and initiatives targeted at giving the average Ghanaian farmer the needed support to expand their scale of production. 

Paramount among these programs, he mentioned was government’s flagship agricultural programs dubbed “PLANTING FOR FOOD AND JOBS” and “REARING FOR FOOD AND JOBS”, adding that under these programs, several farmers in the Kumasi Metropolis and other actors along the value chain have benefitted immensely from the various packages the program affords including but not limited to the distribution of free pesticides to combat the Fall Armyworm menace since this pest was identified in the country and the distribution of breeding stock of pigs, cattle, sheep, goats and guinea fowls to livestock farmers respectively. 

“In the course of this year alone, more than Two Thousand (2000) metric tonnes of both organic and inorganic fertilizers have been distributed to Nine Hundred and Fifty-Six (956) male farmers and Six  outlets in the Kumasi Metropolis at subsidised rates. This has brought good business and increased income to the beneficiary farmers and the input dealers”, the Kumasi disclosed. 

Source: Ghana/otecfmghana.com/ Michael Ofosu-Afriyie,  Kumasi. 

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