Saturday, 20 April

24 banks pledge to help farmers

Business
Some of the managers

24 rural and community bank managers across Ghana have committed to offer credit facilities to farmers with receipts from certified warehouses.

The managers noted that giving more loans to farmers will enable them to increase their agricultural portfolios while supporting growers to produce more food to expand their respective local economies.

The bankers made this commitment at a training workshop in Kumasi organised by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) – a member of the World Bank Group – with financial support from the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO).

The workshop was aimed at creating awareness about the IFC’s Warehouse Receipt System (WRS) project and the various risk mitigation measures to encourage agribusiness financing by the financial institutions.

This financial assistance will empower smallholder farmers to buy more agricultural inputs, plough more acreage and produce more grains, thereby improving the country’s food security as well as the financial wellbeing of the farmers.

The WRS receipt is a document of title given to farmers after they store their produce in a certified warehouse. The farmers are then able to use the WRS receipt as collateral to secure financial assistance from the WRS partner banks.

Representatives from the various banks said this intervention for farmers has been long overdue and they are in full support of the project.

The farmer can apply for a short-term credit from a participating bank or other financial institution using the warehouse receipt as security for a loan, thus increasing access to finance for farmers.

The Ghana Warehouse Receipt System Project is a technical assistance and advisory services project aimed at setting up a well-functioning regulated Warehouse Receipt System that is expected to facilitate increased access to credit to farmers and the supply chain, linkage to structured markets and reducing post-harvest storage loses.

This intervention focuses on supporting a well-functioning WRS as a necessary pre-condition for a successful implementation of the Ghana Commodity Exchange. The project addresses WRS on a policy and regulatory level, system level, including technical advisory, training, capacity building and awareness raising for various stakeholders in the public and private sector.

Source: ClassFMonline.com