Audio By Carbonatix
The Executive Director of Eduwatch Africa, Kofi Asare, says government is not being truthful to Ghanaians on the true cost of the Free SHS policy.
He insists government has been giving contradictory figures on the cost of the policy since its commencement in 2017.
According to him, the figures are revised downwards.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show on Tuesday, Mr Asare said there are integrity issues the government has to address.
He said the amount given as the total expenditure on the policy last year is not in tandem with that of this year.
“The government’s own account of how much it has spent on the Free SHS policy since 2017 keeps changing and evolving. It keeps changing not by increasing but fluctuating. Last year around the same time, the Finance Minister addressed them on the mid-year and he submitted that ¢7.62 billion had been shifted so far unto the policy since 2017.”
“Now a year after, when we have actually added to the numbers, yesterday the same minister comes to the house and indicate that the total amount government has spent on the Free SHS is now ¢5.3 billion which is over ¢2 billion less than what was reported last year.
"So we ask the question that is the case that as the years go by and more and more people are enrolled onto the policy, the cumulative cost to government reduces, which is not possible. So it means there is some data integrity issue somewhere,” he said.
The Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta during the mid-year budget review said ¢5.3 billion has been invested into the policy so far.
According to him, this investment has benefited 1,261,495 Ghanaian children.
On the back of this, he stated that the government’s major flagship programme, Free SHS will not be reviewed.
“It has been at the core of our national transformation efforts since 2017. We have invested ¢5.3 billion to enable 1,261,495 Ghanaian children to access secondary education under the Free SHS programme at the end of 2021 to improve access to education.”
“Out of the 571,892 registered JHS candidates, 555,353, representing 97.1 percent, were placed into SHS this year.”
Meanwhile, Eduwatch Africa has released a statement to back its assertion that government has been giving contradictory figures on the cost of the policy since its commencement in 2017.
Latest Stories
-
$214M in gold-for-reserves programme not a loss, Parliament’s economy chair insists it’s a transactional cost
19 minutes -
Elegant homes estate unveils ultra-modern sports complex in Katamanso
33 minutes -
ECG can be salvaged without private investors -TUC Deputy Secretary-General
38 minutes -
Two pilots killed after mid-air helicopter collision in New Jersey
51 minutes -
2025 in Review: Fire, power and the weight of return (January – March)
1 hour -
Washington DC NPP chairman signals bid for USA chairmanship
1 hour -
Sheikh Ali Muniru remains Volta regional Imam, says National chief Imam
2 hours -
GoldBod CEO accuses Minority of hypocrisy over Gold-for-Reserves losses
2 hours -
Sammy Gyamfi to address alleged losses under gold for reserves programme on Jan 5
2 hours -
BoG–GoldBod $214m hit is design failure, not market loss – Minority
2 hours -
Festive season sees minor fires, but domestic cases hit 15–20 daily – GNFS
2 hours -
CLGB statement on IMF-reported losses under the Gold-For-Reserves programme (G4R)
2 hours -
Ghanaian scientist Moses Mayonu pioneers metabolomics research on the global stage
2 hours -
Planetech Week: Israeli Innovation Sweetens Global Tables with Cherry Tomatoes
3 hours -
Minority demands answers on Bawa-Rock Limited monopoly in GoldBod deal
3 hours
