Citi
FM's campaign to encourage Ghanaians to eat locally produced rice, has
apparently led to the withdrawal of the advertising-spend-cash, which it
hitherto received from rice importers in Ghana. How true is that, one
wonders? Only Citi FM can confirm that story, alas.
If it is
an actual recent development, however, then the consolation for Citi
FM, is that what it has lost in ad revenues from rice importers, will be
replaced ten-fold by a burnished reputation in Ghanaian society, as a
patriotic corporate citizen - an intangible asset that is priceless.
Cool.
The plain truth, is that rice importers constitute a
powerul force in our system, and have influential regime-insiders
lobbying for them in the corridors of power - the protection of vested
interests writ large in other words.
However, for public
health reasons, they must be taken on by the more responsible sections
of the Ghanaian media. Citi FM's pioneering role must lead to greater
media scrutiny of the entire value-chain of Ghana's rice importers - is
it ethical and anchored on corporate good governance principles, for
example? Do they pay all the taxes due the Ghanaian nation-state?
Furthermore,
there are stories in foreign media entities alleging that contaminated
Asian rice is being dumped on markets across Africa. Those stories might
be false. On the other hand they might be true.
In light of
those stories of the alleged dumping of contaminated Asian rice on
markets across Africa, the question for consumers of imported rice in
Ghana is: Why take what amounts to Russian-roulette-type-risk eating
imported rice, when Ghanaian rice is available; fresher, a great deal
more nutritious and safe to eat?
On their part, the smartest
marketing strategy our local rice-farming industry can adopt, is simply
to convert to certified, traceable organic rice farming, as soon as
practicable. In an era when most Ghanaians now see healthy lifestyles as
vital for their overall well-being, producing certified organic rice,
is an unbeatable market niche to occupy. It is called making market
forces work for you (according to the book of my dear online
brother-in-Christ, John Kramer!). Cool.
Saturday, 23 November 2019
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment