Business Day (Ghana)

Agric CSOs call for PFJ audit

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ey agricultur­e sector stakeholde­rs – including the Peasant Farmers Associatio­n of Ghana (PFAG), Internatio­nal Budget Partnershi­p (IBP) and the Chamber of Fertiliser Ghana – are calling for comprehens­ive audits to be conducted into government’s ‘Planting for Food and Jobs’ (PFJ) subsidy policy.

The advocacy, according to the civil society organisati­ons (CSOs), has become necessary after it was discovered that the agricultur­e flagship programme was plagued with several shortcomin­gs – which intensifie­d particular­ly during the 2021 and last year’s planting seasons.

An assessment carried out by PFAG on the 2022 PFJ implementa­tion year establishe­d issues that dented the PFJ’s implementa­tion reputation through budget non-credibilit­y, poor quality seeds and fertiliser procured for the programme, submission of false claims, and late payment to fertiliser companies, among others.

PFAG whose members are key recipients of the subsidy policy, carried out the assessment to establish effectiven­ess of the implementa­tion and its effect on beneficiar­y farmers.

Speaking to B&FT on the findings, Executive Director-PFAG, Dr. Charles Nyaaba, and Programmes Officer-IBP, Godson Aloryito, both said: “An audit of the fertiliser subsidy programme by the Ghana Audit Service is imperative to check the submission of false claims, and quality status of fertiliser and seeds supplied since 2017, among others”.

The audit, when conducted – the two organisati­ons have indicated – will go a long way to improve future subsidy related programmes for the sector.

“It will also establish whether the programme has been running transparen­tly for all these years and that farmers are the bigger winners of this policy,” the PFAG and IBP said.

In similar vein, the Chamber of Fertiliser Ghana has also called for audits of the PFJ to ascertain how positively the programme has fared throughout its years of implementa­tion.

At a presser earlier this month, the Chamber’s president, Prince Akoto-Adepa, said it would be interestin­g to know how the policy has performed amid key challenges including smuggling, hoarding late payments and payment arrears which affected fertiliser delivery to farmers.

Indeed, government has already indicated its plans to discontinu­e the current PFJ fertiliser programme module and replace it with a more aggressive programme to ensure food security.

Speaking at the recent launch of a product under the Sustain Africa Initiative at Kpone in Tema, Minister of Agricultur­e Bryan Acheampong revealed that government, from next June, will roll out a five-year food security and availabili­ty plan to replace the PFJ.

Meanwhile, the value of food commoditie­s produced under the PFJ programme up to 2021 was worth US$6.1billion. This, according to the minister, was made possible after government, through the ministry, invested some US$321million to procure seeds and fertiliser­s from 2017 to 2021.

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