Abstract

This paper discusses Ghana’s cocoa industry from the innovation systems perspective. Cocoa is the major cash crop of Ghana. Its importance is not only in the contribution of about 25% annually of the total foreign exchange earnings but also on account of being the source of livelihoods for many rural farmers and the related actors in the value chain. The critical actors in the innovation system are the farmers, the researchers, the buyers, the transporters, public officers, consumers and the policy makers. By the roles and functions they perform, they impact on the dynamics of the cocoa industry. The paper describes the trends in cocoa production and processing and highlights the key characteristics and implications. It discusses the policy reforms in the cocoa industry and the major drivers of the reforms. The Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) is one of the biggest public institutions in Ghana and its subsidiaries are major actors in the production process of cocoa for export. The key reforms in the policies governing the industry were the dissolution of the monopoly of Produce Buying Company and the deregulation of cocoa purchasing to allow Licensed Buying Companies (LBCs) to enter the business in 1992/93 crop season. There was also the dismantling and re-organization of the Cocoa Services Division into two separate units—the Cocoa Swollen Shoot Virus Disease Control Unit (CSSVDCU) and the Seed Production Unit (SPU). The processing of cocoa into cocoa butter, cocoa paste and confectioneries is an important component of the value chain especially with the national goal of processing 50% of cocoa before export. The paper discusses policy implementation in the cocoa industry underscoring the successes and failures. It highlights lessons for other primary commodity producing countries especially those whose development contexts are similar to Ghana’s.

Highlights

  • Ghana was until the 1970s the leading world producer of cocoa

  • The Cocoa Processing Company (CPC) which used to be a subsidiary of Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) but became privatized with the reformation of the industry currently operates with an expanded installed capacity producing chocolates and cocoa-based sweets and other products for exports and local consumption

  • In considering the cocoa innovation system, the effectiveness of the roles of the critical actors determines the progress made in achieving set goals and objectives of the cocoa industry

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Summary

Introduction

Ghana was until the 1970s the leading world producer of cocoa. It was the highest foreign exchange earner for Ghana even as far as constituting about 45% in the 1960s. The analysis of trends and innovations begins with the description of the critical actors, their roles and their functions How they relate to each other and the strength or weakness of the relationships is important for achieving the overall goals and objectives stated for the sector. COCOBOD is a relatively slimmer organisation with five main subsidiaries including the Quality Control Company and Cocoa Marketing Company (limited liability companies, which play lead roles in addressing the overall organizational goal of exporting premium and high-quality cocoa). It maintains functionally strong linkages with the critical actors espe-. It is one of the experiences in institutional innovation which has re-energized the cocoa industry

Cocoa Processing Companies
Cocoa Farmers
International Organisations and Global Companies
Civil Society Organisations
Research Institutions
Value Addition in the Cocoa Industry
Ghana Cocoa Production Trends
Articles of Plastic
Institutional Innovations
Product Innovation
Key Drivers of Ghanaian Cocoa Superiority
Issues and Challenges in Ghana’s Cocoa Industry
The Importance of Research and Development
Global Threats
Findings
Conclusions and Recommendations
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