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Farmer Extension Ratio In Ghana

Government extension services are able to support more than two million farmers. Private extensions are usually cultivated - specific and do not cover the range of crops grown. Given this, the average annual renewal rate for private farmers in Ghana is between 1.5% and 2.0%, according to the Ministry of Agriculture. 

Very little research has been done on farmers who receive services from these extension agents. Research on renewal benefits for private farmers in Ghana is sparse as their renewal rates are not often evaluated and very little information is available. 


Participatory approaches to training and empowering farmers, involving discovery, learning, experimentation, and group action, have been found in many countries at a cost of between $20 and $40 per participant. In the case of Malawi in the early 1980 "s, direct placement services for farmers cost between $20 and $40 per farmer per year for a total of $1,000 per month. Empirical results of these studies indicate that highly educated farmers, farmers belonging to farming groups with access to extension services, and farmers in rural areas are more likely to receive credit. 
The study, therefore, concludes that improving access to agricultural credit services could be a key component for Ghana's long-term economic development. In order to improve farmers' access to agricultural credit, intensification of agricultural organizations and the adoption of information technology is strongly recommended. An agricultural policy based on farmers' access to financial credit should also be encouraged. 
The research suggests that farmers in Ghana, especially in rural areas, currently do not have access to agricultural credit services. The situation is similar to that in the USA, where an extension agent is used to provide services to up to three thousand farmers. 
Mohammed Khalid Othman told BusinessDay Nigeria that there had been no recruitment of agents in the state for more than a decade and that 80% of the World Bank grant had been exhausted.  has an extensive agent-to-farm ratio, with an estimated 1,000 to 1.5 million farm extensions per year, depending on the state of the country. The number of renewal agents has dwindled in recent years as many approach retirement age. 
Othman pointed out that the country could improve the productivity of farmers if the share of extension funds made available to farmers was not as high as we currently have in this country, especially at a time when the government wants to diversify the economy through agriculture.  Research indicates that there are currently around 1,000 to 1.5 million agricultural expansions per year in Ghana. Two organizations received an amount of $80,000 from the Trust for Africa for the project, which is to be carried out over a period of two years. This is in addition to a grant of $1,500 from the Ghanaian Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD). 
 Two regions also produce large quantities of basic foodstuffs for the project, and research also shows that more than a third of the country's population of 1.5 million people is at risk of food insecurity. Most of them come from farming and market communities in northern and eastern Ghana. 
The shortage of skilled workers in these areas means that they are not aware of the best cultivation methods. To meet this challenge, farmers today use mobile phones to access information about their crops and best practices. Ms. Abakah explained that the power of technology and the mobile phone has helped to solve many of these challenges, such as access to education and farmers "access to the right information. 
Ghana's smallholder farmers continue to lag behind their peers, owing to their inability to boost productivity. For decades, farmers' "failure to access vital information that benefits them has reduced agricultural productivity in the country. Agricultural extension services are one of the most important sources of information for farmers in Ghana, but not all farmers have access to them. 
Extension Agents act as a link between farmers, research institutes, and the government. The study recommends that these variables should be adequately taken into account politically through the privatization of extension services, with the expected impact of increasing the productivity of their farmers and thus improving the quality of life. FarmWallet Want to use credible data collection with the help of Artificial Intelligent (AI) and well-trained extension Agents to change the narrative of Extension Services in Ghana. loading AI Extension.

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