The pricing committee of the Cashew Council Ghana (CCG), through its two-day cashew pricing workshop, seeks to develop and present a fair pricing model to the Tree Crops Development Authority (TCDA), in order to bolster the cashew sector.
The two-day cashew pricing workshop started yesterday in Accra with representatives of cashew traders, processors and farmers, and members of the TCDA Board present.
Addressing participants at the workshop, a Cashew farmer and Board Member of the TCDA, Chief Adams Tampuri, said the pricing workshop is the final stage of the struggles for various cashew stakeholders to develop and get the best out of the sector. He said the true potentials of the cashew sector will come to play once a pricing model is successfully formulated, agreed upon by all stakeholders and adopted by the TCDA. He explained that the aim of the TCDA and the CCG goes beyond determining the monetary value of cashew to reducing poverty in cashew growing areas.
According to Chief Adams Tampuri, many of the challenges of the cashew sector in the past has been as a result of the lack of proper regulatory structures, stating that successfully formulating a cashew pricing model will “create employment and open avenues in different ways.” He was, therefore, optimistic that the establishment of the TCDA and the CCG will make the difference, especially in pricing of cashew.
“What the pricing committee of the TCDA is to do is to price all the six crops, including cashew. However, because of the complex nature of the cashew sector, the TCDA has charged the pricing committee of the CCG to formulate a pricing module for cashew, and present it to the board for further deliberations,” he explained.
President of the National Cashew Farmers Association, Nana Adu-Boaponsem VI, said the workshop is important, especially for farmers. According to him, pricing has been a major problem for farmers in particular, explaining that an agreed fair minimum cashew price will serve as a “bargaining chip” for farmers all over the country.
“Farmers should be assured that their interests are well represented by their leadership. We will ensure that they are well informed about every decision that is taken here and by the authority. After this workshop, there is going to be a fair ground for pricing cashew in Ghana,” he said.
The two-time national cashew best farmer also debunked claims that the farmers were unhappy with the establishment of the TCDA and CCG’s pricing committees, describing such claims as “mere propaganda” by some people. “The pricing committee is not going to dictate price. Those claims in the media are false “, he added.
The branch manager of Cashew at Olam Ghana and a former President of the Cashew Traders and Exporters Association of Ghana, Mr Alhassan Yussif Amankwah, explained that the cashew sector has reached a turning point and requires that all personal interests are put aside for the common good of the sector, which is what the workshop seeks to achieve.
“For us as cashew traders, the good thing is that such discussions on pricing will help in increasing production of raw cashew nuts and in turn grow the cashew industry,” Mr Yussif Amankwah said.
For local cashew processors, a formulated and agreed pricing model will give them a fair idea of their cost of production going into the cashew season. According to them, almost 65 percent of their cost of production goes into raw materials.
“Processors are always in a state of not knowing what will happen in the future in terms of prices. A minimum pricing system will help processors to plan our investment and grow our factories,” the president of the Cashew Processors Association of Ghana, Mr Malvin Nii Smith said.