Business News of Wednesday, 2 October 2024

Source: classfmonline.com

Ivory Coast raises cocoa farmgate price above Ghana's

File photo of cocoa File photo of cocoa

The world’s top cocoa producer, Ivory Coast, has increased the price it pays farmers for their cocoa by 20 per cent, Bloomberg reports.

The raise in farmgate price places Ivorian cocoa farmers above their colleagues in Ghana, the world’s second-largest producer.

The two West African neighbours share a border and together contribute about two-thirds of the world’s cocoa supply.

Despite the rise in Ivory Coast, farmers there, as well as those in Ghana, will continue to receive far less than the global market, Bloomberg noted.

The Francophone country increased the farmgate price by 1,800 CFA francs ($3.06) per kilogramme for the harvest that starts on Oct. 1, Minister of Agriculture Kobenan Kouassi Adjoumani said in the capital, Abidjan.

The rate, which translates to $3,060 per tonne, is a notch higher than what Ghana started paying farmers at the beginning of its season this month, which is $3,039 per tonne.

This could exacerbate smuggling from Ghana to Ivory Coast – a problem that has persisted for decades and been one of the banes of Ghana cocoa.