Agricultural Science | Industrialization | Technology

Ghana’s Finance Ministry rolls out US$ 69m affordable agric financing project

To help address the challenge of difficult access to agribusiness financing, an intervention dubbed the ‘Affordable Agricultural Financing for Resilient Rural Development (AAFORD)’ project has been rolled out.
The US$69 million project’s primary objective is to improve agricultural productivity, incomes, and resilience of smallholder farmers, vulnerable women, and youth. This is expected to be achieved by increasing access to affordable finance in support of better marketing linkages, sustainable and climate-smart strategies, skills, and enterprise development in agricultural value chains.

It will incorporate a targeted inclusive policy to develop the potential of women and youth as ‘untapped resources’ for family resilience. AAFORD is an initiative of the Ministry of Finance, with funding from the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). The project will follow a value chain partnership approach, focusing on developing profitable linkages between agro-producers, offtakers, and partner financial institutions.

It will support business models that target households to develop marketing linkages with offtakers (nucleus farmers, processors, and aggregators) and increase their incomes.
Partner financial institutions will receive agricultural credit guarantee and agricultural insurance initiatives, agricultural lending capacity building, and access to concessional credit funds and incentives from the AAFORD-supported Blended Finance Facility (BFF) to reduce the interest rates on agricultural loans.

The AAFORD project targets providing services directly to about 75,000 poor rural households and indirectly to about 465,000 individuals in smallholder households. In all, a total of over 540,000 smallholder rural individuals are expected to benefit from the project. The target geographical areas are the Northern, Savannah, North-East, Bono, Bono East, and Ahafo Regions. The target crops include cassava, sorghum, maize, soyabean, millet, and groundnuts. Depending on the opportunities, it will also support vegetable value chains relevant to smallholders, such as tomato, pepper, cabbage, carrots, and eggplant. Import substitution crops such as rice will also be given high priority.

Launching the project in Bono Region’s capital, Sunyani, Dr. Amin Adams, Deputy Minister of Finance, described AAFORD as one of the government’s efforts aimed at increasing agricultural productivity and improving the living standards of value chain actors.

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