By Dickson Assan
For generations, agriculture in Ghana has largely been practised on a subsistence basis, dominated by millions of smallholder farmers cultivating relatively small parcels of land primarily to feed their families, with any surplus sold in local markets. Even among farmers who produced for commercial purposes, agriculture was often viewed more as a livelihood than as a business.
Decisions were driven largely by experience, tradition and intuition rather than by structured financial planning and performance measurement. Consequently, many farmers paid little attention to bookkeeping, budgeting, cost analysis, cash flow management or profitability. Success was frequently measured by the size of the harvest rather than by the financial returns it generated.
Many agricultural enterprises fail not because they produce too little, but because they fail to manage the business behind the farm. Accounting is the financial compass that guides every successful enterprise. It records, measures, analyses and communicates financial information that enables entrepreneurs to make informed decisions, monitor performance and plan for sustainable growth.
As Ghana accelerates efforts to transform agriculture into a modern, commercially driven sector, accounting must become as important to the farmer as quality seed, fertiliser, animal feed and mechanisation.
Understand the Difference Between Sales and Profit
One of the most common mistakes among first-time agripreneurs is confusing sales with profit. Selling produce worth hundreds of thousands of cedis does not necessarily mean the business is profitable. Profit can only be determined after considering every cost incurred in generating that revenue.
For crop farmers, these costs include land preparation, seeds, fertilisers, agrochemicals, irrigation, machinery, labour, harvesting, transportation and storage. Livestock farmers must account for breeding stock, feed, veterinary services, utilities, labour, housing and mortality losses. Unless these costs are accurately captured, entrepreneurs cannot determine whether they are creating wealth or merely generating revenue.
Budget Before You Plant or Rear
Before planting starts or livestock is acquired, agripreneurs must estimate expected production, projected selling prices, likely revenues, production costs and funding requirements. This helps to understand, in advance, how much money will be needed, when it will be needed and whether the proposed activity is financially viable.
Equally important is identifying reliable markets before production begins. One of the biggest mistakes many farmers make is producing first and searching for buyers later. Wherever possible, agripreneurs should secure offtakers through supply agreements or establish relationships with wholesalers, processors, exporters, supermarkets or institutional buyers before planting or expanding production. Having reliable offtakers reduces market uncertainty, improves revenue predictability, strengthens cash flow planning and minimises post-harvest losses.
A production budget, therefore, should not only estimate costs and revenues but also be supported by a clear marketing and sales plan. With proper budgeting and market planning, an agripreneur can arrange financing early, negotiate better payment terms with suppliers, adjust production plans or reconsider an enterprise that may not generate sufficient returns. Good budgeting transforms farming from hopeful speculation into strategic business planning.
Separate Personal Money from Farm Money
One of the fastest ways to destroy an agribusiness is to treat the farm as a personal wallet. Many promising agricultural businesses gradually collapse because owners withdraw money whenever personal needs arise. School fees, household expenses, family obligations and personal purchases are financed directly from farm proceeds, making it impossible to know whether the business is actually making money. Every serious agribusiness should maintain a dedicated business bank account, proper accounting records and clearly defined owner withdrawals. Financial discipline begins by recognising that the farm is a separate business entity.
Keep Proper Financial Records
Regardless of the size of the enterprise, every agripreneur should maintain accurate and up-to-date financial records that provide a true picture of the business. This includes recording all cash received and paid, documenting every sale and business expense, maintaining inventory records for seeds, fertilisers, animal feed and harvested produce, keeping payroll records where employees are engaged, and maintaining registers for tractors, irrigation systems and other farm equipment. Production records that capture yields for each crop or livestock enterprise, together with periodic profit and loss statements, are equally important in assessing the financial performance of the business.
These records enable entrepreneurs to monitor business performance, measure profitability, identify areas of inefficiency, control costs and make timely, evidence-based decisions. Proper financial records also enhance transparency and credibility when dealing with banks, investors, development partners and tax authorities.
Cash Flow Is the Lifeblood of Agribusiness
Unlike many other businesses, agriculture is characterised by long production cycles, seasonal income and continuous expenditure. This is why every agripreneur should prepare cash flow forecasts to estimate when cash will be received and when payments will fall due. Such planning helps identify potential cash shortages early enough to arrange financing, negotiate favourable payment terms with suppliers or adjust production activities. Effective cash flow management ensures that the business has sufficient liquidity to sustain operations throughout the production cycle without unnecessary financial stress.
Accounting Helps Reduce Post-Harvest Losses
Ghana loses an estimated US$1.9 billion to US$2 billion worth of agricultural produce annually because of inadequate storage, poor transportation, limited processing capacity and weak market access. These losses represent far more than wasted food.
They embody wasted seeds, fertiliser, labour, fuel, irrigation costs and expected profits. Accounting enables businesses to quantify spoilage, inventory shrinkage and post-harvest losses in monetary terms. Once measured, these losses can be analysed and reduced through investments in storage facilities, cold chain systems, processing plants and improved logistics where financially justified.
Make Better Investment Decisions
Accounting provides the information required to make sound investment decisions. Before purchasing a tractor, irrigation system or processing equipment, entrepreneurs should evaluate whether ownership is more economical than leasing or hiring the equipment during peak seasons. Likewise, accounting helps determine whether expanding into new crops, increasing livestock production or investing in value addition will generate acceptable financial returns.
Good Accounting Improves Access to Finance
Access to finance remains one of the biggest challenges facing agribusinesses in Ghana. Despite agriculture’s significant contribution to the economy, data from the Bank of Ghana consistently shows that the sector receives less than 5% of total bank lending.
This is largely because agriculture is perceived as high risk due to unpredictable weather, pests, diseases, price fluctuations, weak financial management and the informal nature of many farming businesses. According to the Ghana Incentive-Based Risk-Sharing System for Agricultural Lending (GIRSAL), over 60% of agricultural loan applications contain some form of misrepresentation or falsification, prompting lenders to adopt stricter credit assessment processes.
Good accounting helps overcome these challenges. Before approving loans, banks typically require financial statements, production budgets, cash flow forecasts, tax compliance records and evidence of sound financial management. Agripreneurs who maintain accurate accounting records demonstrate transparency, improve lender confidence and significantly enhance their chances of accessing finance.
Maximise Agricultural Tax Incentives
Good accounting enables agribusinesses to maximise tax incentives available under Ghana’s tax laws. Qualifying businesses engaged in activities such as tree crop farming, cattle farming, livestock production and agro-processing enjoy concessionary corporate income tax rates during their tax holiday periods, while agro-processing businesses that use local agricultural raw materials continue to benefit from reduced tax rates after the tax holidays expire, particularly where their operations are located outside Accra and Tema.
Young entrepreneurs also have an additional opportunity. Entrepreneurs aged 35 years or below who operate in priority sectors, including agro-processing, horticulture and medicinal plants, may qualify for a five-year income tax holiday, providing valuable support during the critical early years of their businesses.
Beyond income tax incentives, qualifying agribusinesses may also benefit from import duty and VAT exemptions on selected agricultural machinery, equipment and farming inputs, while export-oriented agro-processing businesses registered under the Ghana Free Zones programme may enjoy additional corporate tax concessions.
However, these incentives can only be fully utilised where businesses maintain accurate accounting records, comply with statutory tax filing obligations and keep proper documentation to demonstrate eligibility. Good accounting therefore, reduces not only financial risk but also the cost of taxation, enabling agribusinesses to reinvest more of their profits into growth.
Conclusion: Financial Intelligence Will Define the Future Farmer
As Ghana accelerates its agricultural transformation agenda, young entrepreneurs must appreciate that success in agriculture will increasingly depend on management capability rather than production alone. Government can provide improved seeds, fertilisers, irrigation infrastructure and supportive policies. Financial institutions can expand lending, while development partners strengthen agricultural value chains. Yet no external intervention can substitute for sound financial management within the enterprise itself.
Dickson is a Chartered Accountant, SME Business Consultant and Founder of CareerCompass Ghana Limited. He advises entrepreneurs and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) on accounting, taxation, financial management, business strategy and corporate governance.
Email:[email protected]Mobile: +233 24 277 1314
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