Abstract

This paper provides a qualitative analysis that highlights the implications on agricultural services of a key stage in decentralisation reforms in Ghana. We assess the status of agricultural expenditure decentralisation and draw out the likely implications for agricultural service delivery and national strategies. The study finds that agricultural officers at all levels (national, regional and district) had concerns about the implementation of the new decentralisation reform. These included budget cuts and delays in releases that coincided with the reform period; the transfer of staff from the civil service to the local government service; and a sense that agriculture may receive less attention when allocation of government resources becomes the preserve of assemblies and district chief executives, rather than the central agricultural ministry. The structural changes also meant that agricultural local government staff now needed to learn to ‘market’ the value of their public services to local government leadership, in order to protect resources for agriculture. The decentralisation reform also necessitated new public expenditure reporting practices to ensure a clear overview of sectoral spending across government tiers.

Highlights

  • This paper provides an empirical analysis of a recent stage in Ghana’s decentralisation of agricultural service delivery

  • This study found that agricultural officers at all levels had concerns about the implementation of Legislative Instrument (LI) 1961

  • District DoA staff worried that agriculture would receive less attention after greater prioritisation powers over resources were transferred to assemblies and MMDA chief executives

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Summary

Introduction

Objectives This paper provides an empirical analysis of a recent stage in Ghana’s decentralisation of agricultural service delivery This stage began in 2011 and, as described below, devolved to the district level certain public funds for agriculture and other sectors which previously had been channelled through central ministries, such as the Ministry of Food and Agriculture. The paper offers insights into the status of agricultural expenditure decentralisation in Ghana and draws out the likely implications for agricultural service delivery and national strategies. It describes the state of decentralisation of agricultural services and funds in 2013, and compares these conditions to those that prevailed before the reforms were initiated in 2011. In light of the scarcity of research on this topic, the authors identify a range of issues for further research attention, and potential opportunities for carrying out such research

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