Livestock farmers to benefit from Credit-in-kind Scheme Ghana News Agency , 20/11/2009
The Livestock Development
Project (LDP) has introduced a new financing facility called
"Credit-in-kind scheme", to allow smallholder farmers to freely
acquire ruminants for rearing.
Under the scheme, the
beneficiary farmers will, be given a number of sheep and goats to
rear for two years and pay back the same quantity of the animals, which will be
given to other beneficiaries.
Already, the first batch
of animals has been conveyed to various quarantine centres in the districts to
undergo deworming and vaccination for onward distribution to beneficiaries.
Mr Maxwell Odonkor, a
Livestock Specialist at the LDP disclosed this to the Ghana News Agency during a two-day training
workshop on Livestock Breed Improvement for Livestock Specialists and Regional Development Officers
for Animal Production
at Amrahia near Dodowa in the Greater Accra Region.
Thirty- five districts in
seven selected regions are benefiting from the scheme, which is being financed
by a 5.76 million dollar grant from the African
Development Bank and supported by the Government of Ghana.
Apart from eliminating
default and misapplication of the LDP loans associated with smallholder
farmers, it would reduce poverty and increase livestock production to cut down
on importation of livestock.
He said out of the million dollar facility,
the local disbursing bank, the Agricultural Development Bank, had disbursed
only 1.7 million dollars because of the high default rate, a situation he said
was not encouraging, since the facility was meant to reach as many smallholder
farmers as possible to raise their income level.
He said: "The scheme
is interest free."
Mr Asare Mensah, Acting
Director of Animal Production Directorate of the Ministry of Food and
Agriculture urged members to redouble their efforts to produce more livestock
products to meet local demand.
He told the participants
that the success of the 2010 budget to achieve high domestic production of livestock to meet
local demand rested on them and gave the assurance that the Ministry would
provide them with all the necessary technical assistance and guidance to
enhance their operations.
He said some people were
of the opinion that "Ghanaian livestock production sector is dead".
Mr Mensah challenged
tasked the farmers to revive the sector, stressing: "Now is our time to
act."
He called on them to
uphold the terms of the new scheme to ensure that others also benefited from
it.