The Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana (CAG) has revealed that the country loses an estimated GH¢5.7 billion annually due to heavy reliance on tomato imports, inefficient local production systems, and weak value-addition infrastructure.
In a statement issued on Monday, the Chamber described the situation as an economic drain equivalent to 1.2 percent of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The disclosure accompanied the unveiling of a National Tomato Production Strategy (2026–2030), developed in partnership with key stakeholders across the tomato value chain.
According to the Chamber, Ghana spends between GH¢650 million and GH¢760 million annually on importing fresh tomatoes and tomato paste. The country imports between 75,000 and 100,000 metric tonnes of fresh tomatoes and 78,000 to 100,000 metric tonnes of tomato paste each year, making it the world’s second-largest importer of tomato paste after Germany.
However, CAG stressed that the true cost of import dependency extends far beyond direct import bills. The Chamber estimates that Ghana loses between GH¢180 million and GH¢220 million annually in uncollected taxes—including income tax, VAT, and corporate taxes—due to an underdeveloped local industry that could otherwise generate approximately 250,000 jobs.
Post-harvest losses remain a major setback to domestic production. An estimated GH¢175 million to GH¢250 million worth of locally grown tomatoes rot each year due to inadequate cold storage facilities, accounting for 30 to 45 percent of total production losses.
Beyond these direct losses, the broader economic impact includes an estimated GH¢4.5 billion in foregone wages that could be earned by Ghanaians if the tomato sector were fully developed. Instead, those economic benefits currently accrue to foreign farmers and processors supplying the Ghanaian market.
CAG also highlighted security implications associated with cross-border tomato trade, referencing recent violence in Burkina Faso that has adversely affected Ghanaian traders operating in the sub-region.
To reverse the troubling trend, the Chamber proposed a GH¢3.2 billion investment under its National Tomato Production Strategy. The initiative aims to transform the sector, reduce imports by at least GH¢600 million annually, generate GH¢220 million in tax revenues, and strengthen domestic production capacity.
The Chamber maintained that urgent investment and policy alignment are critical to safeguarding national food security, protecting traders, and retaining billions of cedis within the local economy.



