THE Chief Operating Officer of the Ethiopian Commodity
Exchange, Mr Ahadu Woushet, has lauded Ghana’s initiative to establish a
Ghanaian Commodity Exchange, elaborating the numerous benefits that the
exchange platform presents.
He said the commodity exchange platform would connect the
various sellers and buyers in the value chain, thereby giving them access to
the right market.
According to him, all the actors in the value chain, which
include the producer, farmer, trader, processor and the international buyer,
are given the opportunity to buy in a competitive market.
Speaking in an interview with the Daily Graphic at the end
of a two-week practical training session for key stakeholders at a Commodity
Exchange Forum in Accra, Mr Woushet said establishing a Commodity Exchange in
Ghana would yield better prices for farmers as they would be positioned
strategically to benefit from price yields.
He said Ghana had better infrastructure and as such was in a
better position to practise this form of exchange, noting that close to 80 per
cent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product was derived from agriculture.
The Chairman of the Technical Commodity for the Ghana
Commodity Exchange, Mr Joe Tackie, in his address, said the ministry had
undertaken initiatives to assess the effectiveness of establishing a commodity
exchange platform in Ghana and was optimistic that it would take off in due
course.
He said the committee would undertake sensitisation and
educational programmes to educate all stakeholders on commodity exchange and
capitalise on the expertise of the Ethiopian Commodity Exchange.
The exchange, according to him, will help develop the
overall effectives of agriculture in the country. He was hopeful that the
needed legal and regulatory framework will be granted soon to enable them start
the process and its operations.
Mr Tackie also tasked participants to focus on the knowledge
they had acquired and utilise it to the fullest to ensure that it would benefit everyone.
He said implementing the knowledge acquired would help
deliver jobs to people as well as improve the livelihood of farmers.
He also urged everyone to take advantage of the
opportunities that establishing the Ghana Commodity Exchange would bring to
Ghanaians.
The two-week forum brought together 28 key stakeholders of
the Ghana Commodity Exchange Institute in Accra. It was organised by the
Ministry of Trade and Industry in collaboration with the UNDP.
The purpose of establishing the Ghana Commodity Exchange is
to create an orderly, transparent and efficient marketing system for Ghana’s
key agricultural commodities to promote agricultural investment, enhance
productivity, encourage market access and fair returns for smallholder farms as
well as facilitate the formalisation of informal agricultural trading.

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