Business World

Ivory Coast raises 2020/21 cocoa farmgate price by 21%

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YAMOUSSOUK­RO, Ivory Coast — Ivory Coast has raised the fixed farmgate price paid to cocoa farmers more than 21% to 1,000 CFA Francs ($1.80) per kg for the main crop of the 2020/2021 season starting Thursday, President Alassane Ouattara said.

The decision by the world’s top cocoa producer is in line with a price rise announced by neighborin­g Ghana on Sept. 24. The two countries account for over 60% of global cocoa bean output.

Addressing thousands of cocoa farmers in the city of Yamoussouk­ro, Ouattara said the price amounted to state support of 355 billion CFA francs given that the current market price stands at 791 CFA francs per kg.

The increases are largely due to the two government­s implementi­ng a price floor of $2,600 per ton and a Living Income Differenti­al (LID ) of $400 per ton, meant to tackle poverty among farmers.

Farmers at the event welcomed the move. “We can invest even more in the farm and take better care of ourselves and our family,” said Augustin Beda, who tends four hectares in the western region of Soubre, at the heart of the cocoa belt. US chocolate maker Mars, Inc. said in a statement that backed by a transparen­t process that ensures the additional income reaches farmers, and measures that limit further expansion of land use for cocoa farming, the LID will help address the income challenge faced by farmers.—

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