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Price of yam increases in third week of March

March 18, 2016
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Ghanaians should expect to pay more for yam (pona) since the price of the commodity has appreciated in its price.

The price of yam has increased by 8 percent and is now being sold in the market at an average price of GHc5.20 per “medium size tuber.”

[contextly_sidebar id=”z5umGWy1JYYECGj29eKPU0CrxmtGOWJQ”]Maize also recorded an increase of 4 percent to close the third week of March, selling at GHc 5.00 per medium size tin.

Checks by Esoko Ghana revealed that cassava (fresh tubers) and tomato also increased marginally 3 percent gain each.

Both closed the week at GHc 6.50 and 6.90 per “3-4 tubers” and medium size tomato tin respectively.

Wheat gained by a percentage point to close the week at GHc 12.50 per “olonka.”

Rice (local) and Soyabean dropped 2 percent each. Both closed the week at GHc 7.70 and 6.00 per “olonka.”

Millet followed with a percentage point loss to close the week at GHS 5.20 per “olonka”.

Esoko Ghana’s check on the various markets further showed that the price for an “olonka” of maize gained by 4 percent in Kumasi to close the week at GHS 5.20 and also gained by 25 percent in Dambai to close the week at GHc 5.00, whilst in the other markets, the price remained the same.

A “medium size tomato tin” full of fresh tomatoes lost 20 percent in Accra to close the week at GHc 8.00.

The commodity however made some gains in Kumasi and Takoradi, In Kumasi; it gained 23 percent to close the week at GHS 9.00 with Takoradi also gaining 18 percent to close the week at GHc 12.00. In the other markets, the price remained the same.

Analysis of price change

Content Manager at Esoko Ghana, Francis Danso Adjei explained that the price of yam increased because “there is no “pona” in the system. So it is the few ones the farmers bring to the market that is being sold in the market.”

“We are still waiting for the bumper harvest. Tomato is also moving up, it means that the lot that were in the system from Burkina Faso is reducing, so we are going to see more price increase in the coming weeks. With rice, the prices have gone down because there is a lot in the system from the north,” he added.

–

Credit: Esoko Ghana Commodity Index

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