Audio By Carbonatix
The Deputy Education Minister Mahama Ayariga is challenging figures from the Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice which say parents are withdrawing their wards from school due to the paucity of the capitation grant.
Commissioner Lauretta Lamptey in highlighting research findings by the Commission noted the country is at the risk of collapsing its basic education.
She said, some parents, unable to pay extra fees due to the inadequacy of the capitation grant, have decided to withdraw their wards from school.
“The Commission commends the government for increasing the capitation grant to 4.50p per child in 2009. However in the view of the Commission, this rate is still too low. We therefore recommend that the capitation grant be increased to 7.00 per child in 2012,” she said.
Mrs Lamptey also called for the expansion of School Feeding Programme from its current one million children to 2 million by September 2012.
This she noted would encourage parents to keep their wards in school in order for them to acquire basic education as stipulated in the 1992 Constitution.
But Mahama Ayariga, in reacting to the Commissioner said: “I beg to differ that parents were withdrawing their wards from school” because the capitation grant was not enough.
On the contrary the deputy Minister said figures available to the Ministry show an increase in the enrolment of pupils into basic schools.
He said government’s interventions like free school uniforms, free supply of text books, increase in the capitation grant has led to an increase in enrolment.
“I do not have evidence to that effect and I don’t know where they [CHRAJ] are getting that from. The evidence rather is that there is so much enrolment in our schools and part of the reason why children are being enrolled by their parents is the fact that the state is expending so many other facilities that otherwise parents would have paid for,” he explained.
“…I do not have evidence to show that children are dropping out because some schools are asking parents to make some contributions. It may be happening but the question is what is the scale and whether, indeed, those schools need additional resources.
He called for more thorough investigations and research in order to come out with the actual figures of school enrolment at the basic level.
Ayariga conceded the amount of the grant may be low but said any such increase as was being recommended by CHRAJ would be an index of the amount of money available to government and how much of it is allotted to the education ministry.
He is convinced that government would always prioritize education and make the necessary expenses as and when it is needed.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
GNFS records sharp drop in fire deaths and injuries, saves over GH¢470m in property
4 minutes -
Bakers and flour users call for government support to boost local bakery industry
11 minutes -
Rawlings family consoles General Nunoo-Mensah over the loss of his wife
26 minutes -
CHASS confident funding dispute will be resolved, avoiding shutdown
27 minutes -
OSP ruling: Parliament cannot delegate prosecutorial powers, says Deputy Attorney-General
28 minutes -
Gov’t triples monthly allowances for paramount chiefs and queen mothers — Local Gov’t Minister
35 minutes -
MTN Ghana appeals for help to safeguard fibre cables amid rising cuts
43 minutes -
Japan eases back tsunami warning after magnitude 7.7 quake
46 minutes -
Fire erupts at Kumasi New Kejetia Market shop, causes damage
51 minutes -
Yaw Sarpong, Maame Tiwa were not members in good standing – MUSIGA
1 hour -
Local Government Minister criticises Akufo-Addo administration over weak decentralisation
1 hour -
Addressing the silent threat: Why Ghana’s free primary health care must not ignore our children
1 hour -
University of Ghana wins 2nd edition of National Banking and Ethics Challenge 2026
1 hour -
Ghana, Zambia deepen tech ties as high-level delegation visits Ghana
1 hour -
$600m petroleum revenue drop driven by production decline — PIAC
1 hour