Ghana’s long-standing commodity financing architecture is facing a major overhaul. Speaking at a town hall meeting with the Ghanaian diaspora in London, President John Dramani Mahama has announced the move away from the traditional offshore pre-export certification process that has governed the country’s cocoa sector for decades.
The proposed strategy aims to dismantle the historical cycle of borrowing from foreign commodity traders by restructuring the financial operations of the Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD). This intervention seeks to retain both the sovereign ownership of the agricultural yield and the industrial value generated across the domestic supply chain.
“Before, at the beginning of every season to go and borrow money from the traders. And we use that money to purchase the cocoa, and we collateralise our cocoa beans in advance for that money. So if it’s the 2026 season and they give us $1 billion, we collateralise the 2026 beans to them. And so you have to export those beans to them.
“This year, the Minister of Finance has been trying to revitalise the Cocoa Board. The Minister of Finance is going to allow the Cocoa Board to float a bond by itself to raise the money that it needs to buy our cocoa”
President John Dramani Mahama
For generations, the financial baseline of Ghana’s cocoa economy has been defined by this annual international syndication ritual. While this mechanism provided necessary foreign exchange liquidity, it introduced severe structural restrictions by the legally required forward-collateralization of the unharvested crop.

President Mahama identified this practice as a primary constraint on national industrial development, noting that pledging future harvests directly prevents the state from retaining raw materials for domestic processing plants. The core of the new directive centers on a complete restructuring of how agricultural capital is raised.
The Ministry of Finance’s move to reform COCOBOD’s capital market operations, empowering the Board to independently issue corporate bonds on domestic and international markets, will be backed by structured sovereign guarantees rather than forward-sold physical assets. Ghana will no longer rely on external buyers who demand raw commodity commitments in exchange for liquidity.
This shift in financing strategy is to decouple crop funding from physical bean delivery obligations by raising capital independently through a dedicated bond mechanism. “Ghana’s aim is to eliminate the restrictive collateral clauses imposed by offshore lenders,” President Mahama noted as he explained the operational differences between the legacy financing framework and the proposed independent bond structure.
Retaining uncollateralized ownership of the seasonal yield gives the state full regulatory control over where the raw materials are destination-routed. This financial independence serves as the foundation for the administration’s broader manufacturing and import-substitution goals.
50% Local Processing Mandate
With the elimination of forward-export collateral requirements, the administration plans to introduce a strict domestic processing quota. The policy mandates that a minimum of 50% of all raw cocoa beans harvested within Ghana must be retained onshore for local grinding, processing, and manufacturing.

This initiative directly addresses a long-standing structural imbalance in the economy: the export of low-value raw materials and the subsequent re-importation of high-value finished consumer goods, as the economic drain caused by this value asymmetry has significantly undermined Ghana’s trade balance.
President Mahama highlighted the economic necessity of reversing this extractive trade pattern and keeping half of the national harvest within domestic processing facilities, to stimulate local industrialization, generate specialized manufacturing employment, and capture a larger share of the global confectionery market’s profits.
Expanding domestic processing operations requires a reliable supply of raw inputs. Securing this raw material buffer through a self-financed purchasing model allows local processing plants to scale up production, moving beyond basic primary grinding into high-margin end-consumer manufacturing.
The long-term success of this domestic value-addition strategy is closely tied to regional trade integration. Rather than focusing exclusively on saturated Western consumer markets, Ghana is positioning its expanded finished product inventory to capture emerging opportunities within the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
The continental free trade framework offers a significant structural advantage for agro-processed goods originating from West Africa, provided they meet strict regional value thresholds. Under the AfCFTA’s established Rules of Origin framework, products must demonstrate substantial local material composition to qualify for duty-free and quota-free trade across participating states.
Because Ghanaian chocolate, cocoa powders, and specialized beverages are manufactured entirely from locally harvested crop inputs, they satisfy these criteria without relying on complex international supply chain inputs. President Mahama emphasized that this compliance makes the “country’s cocoa portfolio a primary driver for continental trade expansion.”

This continental trade approach represents a major shift in how West African nations view commodity wealth, matching independent domestic financial strategies with regional trade frameworks to transform Ghana from a vulnerable supplier of raw agricultural inputs into a primary hub for finished agro-industrial products across the African continent.
For global commodity markets and local industrial operators, this strategy marks a clear attempt to rewrite the traditional terms of trade through calculated state-backed financing and localized manufacturing expansion.
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