I will retire from politics after 2020 as a cocoa farmer – Prez. Mahama

President-MahamaPresident John Dramani Mahama has revealed his plans after politics in the event of him successfully serving a two four-year term.

He intends going into full-time cocoa farming in the year 2020 when he retires from politics after his tenure as President of Ghana ends.

According to President Mahama, his motivation to enter into cocoa farming is due to the discovery of the rising demand for cocoa in Asia and the new price for cocoa producers as a bag of cocoa per the 64kg is now selling for GH¢345, representing an increase of 62.74 percent in the producer price of cocoa.

Speaking with members of the Cocoa Farmers Association last Wednesday at the Flagstaff House when they paid a courtesy call on him, President Mahama said the demand for cocoa all over the world is continuing to grow as the cocoa price has regained its value.

The President in his remarks stated that cocoa continues to be the mainstay of the country’s economy as every year close to US$3 billion is earned on cocoa alone, wondering why people are still excited about oil.

“…..cocoa continue to be the mainstay of this economy. Every year we earn something close to US$3 billion on cocoa alone and yet people are more excited about oil. Ghana has discovered oil so our lives are going to change? Cocoa still affects our lives more than oil. The contribution of oil to our national budget last year was only US$700 million. Cocoa brought US$3 billion into our economy. So cocoa is still the mainstay of our economy and we must put our money where our mouths are, and we must continue to put our money in cocoa farming so that it can continue to say sustain this economy”.

“So with this incentive of the price increase it must be a motivation to people to go back home and invest in cocoa farming. I, myself, am motivated to come and look for some land somewhere. I was telling the Chief Executive that with this price I will also come to Eastern Region or Western Region somewhere and find some land or Volta Region and also start my cocoa farm to prepare for my retirement after 2020. If I start now by 2020 it will be bearing fully and I can retire comfortably on it,” he revealed.

“With this new price it becomes an incentive for us to look after our farms better in order to increase the productivity and then also to even expand our farms so that we can produce more of the cocoa. I want us to see cocoa farming as a business and not as a way of life. It must be a business that we go into for profit so that we can use the profit to invest and make our lives better”, he emphasized.

Read below the Full Transcript of President John Dramani Mahama’s Remarks: Courtesy Call by Cocoa Farmers Association- October 8, 2014.

Let me thank all of you for taking time off and travelling from all across the country to pay this courtesy visit to us at the Flagstaff House. I am very happy. It is a very great day for me to be able to receive you here at the seat of government.

This visit is long overdue. I remember after I was sworn-in as President I received a request from the executives of the Cocoa, Coffee and Shea nut Farmers Association to come and pay me a visit to congratulate me.

Unfortunately due to circumstances we have not been able to schedule it and as the President of the Association said God’s time is the best. I believe that on this occasion we have come in an even happier mood because of the changes that are taking place in the cocoa industry.

There is something that is said in the bible, which is true for farming, that, YOU REAP WHAT YOU SOW. What you sow is what you reap. You cannot reap more than you have sown. So I think that you deserve the thanks because of what you are doing for this country. We are doing our duty to incentivise and motivate you to produce more to assist the country. So I will give the thanks back to you and thank you for all the work you have been doing for Mother Ghana.

We took a policy to pay farmers 70% of the world market price of cocoa and as was quoted by the secretary of the association the world market price has fluctuated so in 2011 it was difficult to pay any increase on the cocoa price.

Happily the cocoa price has regained its value. And all over the world demand for cocoa is continuing to grow. We are discovering new markets in Asia, in China. Consumption of cocoa products is going up in those areas so it means that there is a bright future for cocoa ahead of us. So we need to rise up to the occasion, take advantage of it by producing more cocoa to meet the world market demand.

With this new price it becomes an incentive for us to look after our farms better in order to increase the productivity and then also to even expand our farms so that we can produce more of the cocoa. I want us to see cocoa farming as a business and not as a way of life. It must be a business that we go into for profit so that we can use the profit to invest and make our lives better.

The notion that it is only our grandfathers in the villages who are involved in cocoa farming must change. Young people can also go into cocoa farming and make a profitable life out of it. We have a lot of our young people who leave beautiful lands in the village and come here to the streets and are hawking dog chains and other such products. Yet if they invested just a little into an acre of cocoa farm I am sure that they will make much more money from that cocoa farm than they will make selling those things that they sell on the streets.

So with this incentive of the price increase it must be a motivation to people to go back home and invest in cocoa farming. I, myself, am motivated to come and look for some land somewhere. I was telling the Chief Executive that with this price I will also come to Eastern Region or Western Region somewhere and find some land or Volta Region and also start my cocoa farm to prepare for my retirement after 2020. If I start now by 2020 it will be bearing fully and I can retire comfortably on it.

I want to thank you because cocoa continues to be the mainstay of this economy. Every year we earn anything close to US$3billion on cocoa alone and yet people are more excited about oil. Ghana has discovered oil so our lives are going to change. Cocoa still affects our lives more than oil. The contribution of oil to our national budget last year was only US$700million. Cocoa brought US$3billion into our economy.

So cocoa is still the mainstay of our economy and we must put our money where our mouths are, and we must continue to put our money in cocoa farming so that it can continue to sustain this economy.
I want to commend the new board of COCOBOD and also the new very active and vibrant Chief Executive for some of the new innovations that he is introducing into the industry. I am sure that with those innovations he is introducing we are going to see even bigger production of cocoa.

We must not see the one million as a target. We must surpass the one million mark. It should become normal that we produce more than one million tonnes of cocoa in this country. It should not be a target from year to year we attain and then we fall back. Then we say, oh! next year we will get one million. It should be something that we regularly surpass- that we produce more than one million tonnes of cocoa in this country every year and we can do it if we put our minds to it.

There are a lot of places where we can replant the cocoa. We have the cocoa rehabilitation programme where COCOBOD is providing the seedlings free of charge to our farmers. So let’s take advantage of it.

If your trees are old and they are not producing again, just go to COCOBOD, take the free seedlings, cut down the old trees and then replant. It does not take long. In three years you will start harvesting something. Within 5 years it will be bearing properly. And by God’s grace all of us will leave beyond 5 years.

So let me thank you very much and thank the executives of the COCOBOD for the innovation in respect of the bonuses. I have received so many complaints about farmers not getting their bonuses and anytime I went around the country, the farmers were saying our bonus; we have not been paid our bonus. This time, Gafili Gadochi.

When you sell your cocoa, you get your payment for your cocoa and you collect your bonus at once. We will not say the bonus will come later and it never comes. So that matter is done away with once and for all.

So let me thank you. I am not going to talk too much because we are going to commission your building and I might have some more to say. So I will reserve the rest for the commissioning of the COCOSHE building.

Thank you very much

ABOUT: Nana Kwesi Coomson

[email protected]

An Entrepreneur, Corporate Social Responsibility, Corporate Communications Executive and Philanthropist. Editor-in-Chief of www.233times.com. A Senior Journalist with Ghanaian Chronicle Newspaper. An alumnus of Adisadel College where he read General Arts. His first degree is in Bachelor of Arts - Political Science (major) and History (minor) from the University of Ghana. He holds MSc in Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and Energy with Public Relations (PR) from the Robert Gordon University in the United Kingdom. He is a 2018 Mandela Washington Fellow who studied at Clark Atlanta University in USA on the Business and Entrepreneurship track.

View all posts by: Nana Kwesi Coomson  

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