The Mastercard Foundation and IDH partner to strengthen Ghana’s grain market with ‘Grains for Growth’ program
The Mastercard Foundation and IDH announced the launch of an innovative partnership, dubbed Grains for Growth, to transform Ghana’s grains market.
The Program aims to develop inclusive, and economically viable grain-supply chains that will offer employment and entrepreneurship opportunities, contribute to better incomes, and improve livelihoods of farmers, especially women and youth.
Over the next three-and-a-half-years, the Grains for Growth program will partner with a dozen small and medium- sized enterprises (SMEs) in northern Ghana, high-profile off-takers, and other supply chain actors, to create 103,000 work opportunities across the maize, rice, millet, fonio, and sorghum supply chains with majority of these, targeting young Ghanaian women and men. The program will also support the inclusion of 20,000 smallholder farmers through optimized sourcing and service delivery structures, whilst aiming to significantly increase incomes for participating farmers.
Grain Production in Ghana
Grain production in the northern part of Ghana is largely characterized by informal supply chains, where actors have limited access to affordable financing solutions, mechanized services, and quality agro-inputs. These constraints negatively affect the quality and volumes of grain production and the ability of SMEs in the value chain, to attract and maintain premium-paying buyers resulting in limited commercial investments.With increasing local demand for grains in Ghana, a rising import dependency, and local raw-material sourcing interests, there is significant opportunity for the grains sector to facilitate economic growth and create social impact through job creation and improving the livelihoods of smallholder farmers.
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Grains grown sustainably
The Grains for Growth program is part of IDH’s Grown Sustainably in Africa (GSA) program. Under this program, IDH works with multinationals, including Nestlé, Unilever, Dutch State Mines/Africa Improved Foods, Dangote, throughout Africa to incorporate smallholder farmers and SMEs into their supply chains through close capacity building, business development support, and facilitating market linkages.The program also aligns with the Mastercard Foundation’s Young Africa Works strategy in Ghana, which focuses on deepening efforts in the agriculture and agriculture adjacent sector, to unlock work opportunities for young Ghanaian women and men.
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To build the commercial viability of value chain operators, the program will also enable SMEs to improve their operational capacity, meet the quality and procurement standards of multinationals, and to optimize their smallholder farmer sourcing and service delivery structures.Nestlé Central and West Africa, one of the first off-takers in the program will leverage their technical expertise and establish backward integration systems to help build capacity of SMEs in the value chain.
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Nestlé is committed to sourcing 20% of its produce from regenerative agriculture farms by 2025, 50% by 2030, and 100% beyond 2050.About The Mastercard Foundation
The Mastercard Foundation works with visionary organizations to enable young people in Africa and in Indigenous communities in Canada to access dignified and fulfilling work. It is one of the largest, private foundations in the world with a mission to advance learning and promote financial inclusion to create an inclusive and equitable world. The Foundation was created by Mastercard in 2006 as an independent organization with its own Board of Directors and management.
For more information on the Foundation, please visit: www.mastercardfdn.org
About Young Africa Works
Young Africa Works is the Mastercard Foundation’s strategy to enable 30 million young Africans, 70 percent of whom will be young women, to access dignified and fulfilling work. Africa will be home to the world’s largest workforce, with 375 million young people entering the job market by 2030. With the right skills, these young people will contribute to Africa's global competitiveness and improve their lives and those of their communities. The Mastercard Foundation will implement Young Africa Works in 10 African countries in collaboration with governments, private sector, entrepreneurs, educators, and young people. The first phase of countries identified by the Mastercard Foundation are Rwanda, Kenya, Ghana, Senegal, Ethiopia, Uganda, and Nigeria.