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President Mahama Unveils Cocoa Financing Overhaul, Vows End to Foreign-Backed Purchases

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Attractive News Blog of Sunday, 15 February 2026

Source: Andre Mustapha NII okai Inusah

President John Mahama has announced sweeping reforms to Ghana’s cocoa financing system, declaring that the country will no longer rely on foreign funding to purchase its cocoa beans.

Speaking at the closing of his high-level side event, “Accra Reset’s Addis Reckoning,” on the sidelines of the 39th Assembly of Heads of State of the African Union in Addis Ababa, Mahama described the decision as a decisive step toward economic sovereignty.

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“One of the key decisions we’ve made is to stop accepting foreign funding for the purchase of our cocoa. We are going to raise domestic bonds. We have enough Cedis in Ghana to pay for our cocoa,” the President declared.

For decades, Ghana’s cocoa purchases have been financed through foreign loans backed by cocoa beans as collateral. According to Mahama, this arrangement has limited the country’s ability to retain value from its most important export.

“You know what the collateral for the funding is? Our own cocoa beans. You collateralise the beans with the financier, buy them, ship them, and they pay you the international market price,” he explained.

The President revealed that the structural weaknesses of the system became clear during recent market volatility. Ghana had set a producer price when international cocoa was trading at $7,200 per ton and the Ghana Cedi stood at 11.5 to the dollar. When prices later fell to $4,200 and the Cedi appreciated to 10.7 per dollar, the country absorbed significant losses.

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More critically, Mahama noted that Ghana has the capacity to process up to 400,000 tons of cocoa locally but cannot allocate beans to domestic processors because they are tied to foreign financing agreements.

Under the new policy, Ghana will raise domestic bonds in Cedis to finance cocoa purchases directly from farmers. The move is expected to unlock 400,000 tons of cocoa beans for local processing, potentially creating thousands of jobs and significantly increasing value addition within the country.

Mahama framed the reform as part of his broader “Accra Reset” agenda, aimed at restructuring Africa’s economic relationships and prioritizing domestic industrial capacity.

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“From Addis, we must stop talking and start implementing,” he concluded, urging African leaders to move from policy discussions to concrete action.

Writer’s Name: Andre Mustapha Nii Okai Inusah

Popularly Known As: Attractive Mustapha

Email: attractivemustapha@gmail.com

Contact Number: 0244 259 564

Source:
www.ghanaweb.com

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