The Core Issue: Ghana Cocoa Board’s Funding Model Has Stalled
Reporting from News Ghana and Reuters confirms that Cocobod (the country’s cocoa regulatory body) entered the 2024-25 season without a fully functioning syndicated loan, after legacy arrears from prior seasons weakened lender appetite.
Instead, cocoa purchases relied more heavily on buyer-linked financing and ad-hoc arrangements, reducing liquidity precisely when prices and FX volatility demanded more working capital, not less.
This has produced a structural mismatch:
- Domestic producer prices were fixed at elevated levels when global prices and the cedi were stronger.
- Global prices subsequently retreated into the USD 5,400–6,000/t range in early 2026.
- Ghanaian beans became uncompetitive at export parity, even as Cocobod remained obligated to pay farmers at the higher fixed price.