Saturday, September 18, 2010

BANKS SUPPORT FARMERS WITH GH¢ 4.5 MILLION

A total of 1,255 farmers, in various groups, are to benefit from a credit facility of over GH¢ 4.5 million from some financial institutions for the cultivation of maize, sorghum and soya bean.

The cultivation would be under a new approach to value chain financing introduced by the Northern Rural Growth Programme (NGRP).

The farmers 1,255 are made up of 7,910 males 3, 262 females.

Under the value chain financing approach, farmers are linked backward to input dealers, mechanization services providers, extension technical services and then forward linkage to buyers’ i.e. (marketing and processing companies) to ensure ready inputs and markets for the farmers.

Mr. Roy Ayariga, National Coordinator of the NRGP, announced this at a forum on the NRGP approach to agricultural commodities value chain financing, in Tamale.

The forum brought together bank managers from the Apex Bank, Agricultural Development Bank, and some rural banks and project officers.

District directors of Agriculture from the participating NRGP areas in the Northern region and five districts in the Brong Ahafo region were also present.

They discussed the potentials and challenges of the value chain approach in order to promote profitable agri-business for all the actors along each commodity value chain.

He said that under the value chain financing approach, the NRGP had introduced “the cashless credit system” whereby farmer groups, the banks and the facilitating agencies, such as the Ministry of Food and Agriculture and agricultural-oriented NGOs agree and certify input dealers and mechanization service providers and marketing companies in advance.

He explained that when this was done and a loan was approved for a farmer group, then the group gets land prepared by a tractor service provider, the area is measured and the bank pays the service provider and debits the groups’ account.

He said the purchase of fertilizer was also done in a similar arrangement.

Giving reasons for the introduction of the “cashless credit system,” Mr. Ayariga said, farmers usually pick cash loans and some urgent social needs compel them to divert some of the funds for non profitable social ventures, thereby, making repayment of the loan a serious challenge.

http://ghanadistricts.com/news/?read=37497

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