The Ivorian government pays 40 percent of the functioning of the rural development agency, including ANADER employee salaries.
Another 40 percent of the agency's revenues come from agricultural companies in the coffee, cocoa and cotton sectors, among others, who pay ANADER to train and advise planters from agricultural cooperatives associated with them.
The remaining 20 percent of revenues is secured through fees ANADER charges to individual planters who own more than 200 hectares of land for technical training and advice.
International organizations, such as the World Bank, also pay ANADER to assist them with specific agricultural development projects in the country, such as training and advising a specific population within one of their projects.