The Minister for Food and Agriculture, Dr. Bryan Acheampong, has stated that creating opportunities for roping in the youth has been paramount to the government, underscoring the fact that youth involvement in agriculture is critical.
He said this when he addressed the youth at an agriculture conference on Wednesday, October 18, at the University of Ghana.
The conference sought to deepen the appreciation among the youth for the strategic shift in delivering solutions to the problems in the sector and also to take a giant step towards collaboration between the government and the youth to effectively harness the potential of agriculture.
Dr. Bryan was inspired by the positive response of the youth to the engagement, which focuses on youth employment in agriculture, particularly under the new PFJ 2.0 programme, because the youth is one of the biggest actors in the agriculture sector.
According to Dr. Bryan, a conversation has already started between the Ministry and the Youth and Employment Agency (YEA) about the form of collaboration that will be taken to ensure commitment on both sides.
On the side of the government, the immense opportunities that come with the input credit system introduced under PFJ 2 and complimentary interventions through the establishment of agriculture zones and economic enclaves were brought to the fore. For its part, YEA elaborated on its intended support for the programmeme through capacity building, access to land, and the payment of stipends to beneficiaries at the early stages of the programmeme.
The significance of the conference cannot be overstated. First, it is very timely because it is being held when the government has outlawed a new direction for prosecuting the agenda of transforming Ghana’s agriculture. Right from the conception of the programme, through the planning phase, to the launch, and now at the point of implementation, formal and informational conversations with actors along the agriculture value chain and other stakeholders have centred on productivity and job creation.
The Minister for Food and Agriculture also stated that PFJ 2 is designed to consolidate and build on the successes of PFJ 1. As a first priority, the programme seeks to ensure that Ghana becomes food secure within the planned implementation period. Other related objectives are job creation, particularly for the teeming youth of the country, reducing food price inflation, building food system resilience, and promoting import substitution and exports.
To assure the youth, achieving these objectives will inherently lead to the creation of job opportunities along the agriculture value chain. An input credit model around which the programme revolves, for instance, ensures easy entry into agribusiness.