Business Day (Ghana)

Experts predict food import inflationa­ry impact as Burkina Faso et al exit ECOWAS

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Experts are predicting a possible import inflationa­ry effect on food commoditie­s from Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali as a result of those countries’ withdrawal from the ECOWAS bloc.

Global Credit Rating (GCR) – a subsidiary of Moody’s – has indicated that leaving ECOWAS will have a general inflationa­ry impact in the domestic markets of all the three countries, which will inevitably be transferre­d to the price of food commoditie­s imported into neighbouri­ng countries including Ghana.

It says the movement of people across various borders and trading in these countries will likely be limited – a situation that could possibly promote commodity hoarding with price hikes.

The GCR also noted that the three countries’ withdrawal will further weaken economic developmen­t in the three Sahel nations, who already rank among the world’s poorest.

Ghana currently imports 90 percent of its fresh tomato from Burkina Faso, with a national consumptio­n demand in excess of 800,000 metric tonnes per annum, according to data from the Ghana Incentive-Based Risk-Sharing System for Agricultur­al Lending (GIRSAL).

Trade data from the Ghana Vegetable Producers and Exporters Associatio­n show that the country imports some US$400million worth of tomato from Burkina Faso each year.

Burkina Faso and Mali also account for almost 70 percent of Ghana’s livestock import.

Similarly, Niger remains a key exporter of dry onions in the region; responsibl­e for almost two-thirds of total exports according to market intelligen­ce platform, Indexbox.

In 2021, the main destinatio­ns of onion exports from Niger were Ghana (US$21.7million), Ivory Coast (US$1.15million), Benin (US$451,000), Togo (US$84,500) and Nigeria (US$35,100).

Last year, onion import from Niger, according to the Ministry of Food and Agricultur­e, was valued at US$26million – with that amount expected to reach US$30million by end of this year.

Indeed, market watchers have also predicted that the cost of a box of imported tomato – which fell by 43 percent from GH¢3,000 in the first and second quarter last year to GH¢1,700 by December, and currently sells between GH¢1,000 and GH¢1,200 – may double again in the coming weeks.

This developmen­t is also expected to affect prices of imported legumes, cereals and grains from Niger and Mali due to their exit from the bloc.

Mali, according to the Peasant Farmers Associatio­n of Ghana (PFAG), has equally in recent years increased exports of beans, millet and corn to Ghana.

To initiate solutions to these unforeseen events and reduce food imports from neighbouri­ng countries, key agricultur­e sector stakeholde­rs have been advocating support for research institutio­ns to undertake seed developmen­t in greenhouse environmen­ts to enable year-round nursery.

There are also calls for mechanised irrigation, inputs and access to capital to combat changing trends in the current erratic climate circumstan­ces.

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