Thursday,
November 1, 2012
He is all over the place,
promising everything that comes to his mind as if that’s all politicking for
the December elections is all about. Indeed, giving him the politically
motivated name “FREEMAN” won’t be out of place; will it?
“I will provide free this, free
that, free everything” has become his buzz campaign message.
Out of the whole lot, his promise
on free Senior High School education has stoked so much fire as to become the
double-edged sword to cut him to size.
We are still waiting for
Akufo-Addo to provide specifics on this promise so we can debate it with
substance. We want to go beyond the surface to see what this promise entails.
Without specifics, the promise will remain to us as a dangerous figment of Mr.
FREEMAN Akufo-Addo’s imagination.
We have remained particularly unconvinced
that he properly diagnosed the problems facing our education sector before
coming out with this promise. He comes across as lacking sufficient knowledge
about the remote and immediate causes of those problems. What he has put
forward as a solution is no solution at all. It is too sweeping a cosmetic
measure that frightens instead of appeasing us.
Despite his followers’ desperate attempts
to highlight it as the best measure for addressing the high cost of SHS education—or
for upholding it as the solution to the country’s human resource problems—indications
are clear that their efforts are still short of the mark. There is still stiff opposition
to Akufo-Addo’s promise because critics feel it is unfeasible or just made on
the spur-of-the-moment for cheap political capital. No foundation exists for
such a promise to be fulfilled, and Akufo-Addo can’t lay it all too soon.
Many of us consider that promise
as a mere political gimmick aimed at deceiving the electorate for votes. We
have given several reasons to support our stance and challenged proponents of
Akufo-Addo’s promise to provide substance to facilitate the discourse. They are
yet to do so.
The main bone of contention is
funding. We are not convinced that Akufo-Addo knows exactly where funding for
his promise will come from. There is speculation that an NPP government under
him will raise VAT to 20% to mobilize resources for fulfilling that promise.
Anything of the sort will have dire consequences on an already-sagging economy.
Another area being eyed by Akufo-Addo
is known. He has dropped hints concerning the sources of revenue to support his
fee-free education, which he repeated on Tuesday during the Presidential Debate
organized by the Institute of Economic Affairs in Tamale.
He said
that a government under his leadership would use oil proceeds to improve
education, health, and other sectors of the economy.
His
eyes are solely fixed on the oil money, which raises eyebrows. It opens to
question what is happening in the petroleum sector under this government. How
much money is Ghana making from the oil industry and how is that money being
used? We want to know now before we even begin imagining how Akufo-Addo will
turn to the oil revenue for funding his free SHS agenda.
By
now, the government should have told Ghanaians how much it has generated from
the oil industry since its commissioning and how much is projected to be earned
over the next few years; but as is characteristic of regimes that delight in
keeping their citizens in the dark about such issues of public interest, no one
is telling Ghanaians anything to keep them informed about happenings.
What
happens if Akufo-Addo gets to know that what he has set his eyes on isn’t after
all the windfall that can fund his dream? Turn to the international donor
community for resources (as is already the case of the Schools Feeding
Programme institutionalized by Kufuor with support from the Danish government)?
Will such a programme be self-supporting?
In
any case, it is preposterous for Akufo-Addo to trust revenue from the oil
industry as the sole source of funding for his grandiose promise. Or does he
know more than we do about the oil industry? I am not sure.
Yet
another issue that is not being raised by Akufo-Addo. What will be the fate of all
existing scholarship schemes already supporting SHS students? We know how the
Ghana Cocoa Board supports students. Will Akufo-Addo abolish the Cocoa Board’s
scholarship scheme and divert the funds into the pool that his government might
create for a fee-free SHS education? What about other scholarship schemes
established by various personalities and institutions all over the country
(e.g., the Asantehene’s Education Endowment Fund)?
Handling
these scholarship schemes could be problematic unless Akufo-Addo’s intentions
dovetail with what is already being successfully implemented. As of now, there
is no signal, and we are all the more alarmed.
Those
with a herd mentality supporting Akufo-Addo to spread this malicious promise
had better take caution. There are more questions to ask about this promise
than any answer that has been given so far by these proponents.
We appreciate
the candid opinion expressed in a recent JoyFm interview by Paapa
Owusu Ankoma, a former Education Minister in the erstwhile Kufuor regime, that
the implementation of the free SHS education policy would be tough.
His position reflects widespread doubts over this promise by Akufo-Addo more so when nothing concrete has been given us to know how that promise could be implemented against the background of an ailing economy. At least, it can’t begin being implemented as soon as Akufo-Addo enters office.
His position reflects widespread doubts over this promise by Akufo-Addo more so when nothing concrete has been given us to know how that promise could be implemented against the background of an ailing economy. At least, it can’t begin being implemented as soon as Akufo-Addo enters office.
The
truth behind Owusu Ankoma’s opinion is clear: the party would need 10 years or
more to make teaching attractive enough for a mass body of teachers that would
be required for the implementation of free education policy. Improving
SHS education entails more than what Akufo-Addo imagines.
Of
course, Owusu Ankoma’s candid opinion will definitely annoy some in the NPP who
will see it as a betrayal; but they need to be reminded that their own Senior
Minister, J.H. Mensah has already echoed such pessimism.
Such
opinions are a clear pointer to the fact that there is a lot wrong with the
promise itself, let alone how it will be fulfilled without compounding existing
problems.
We
expect well-meaning and conscientious functionaries in the NPP to come out with
opinions that will throw more light on this promise. Otherwise, they will not
be helping Akufo-Addo’s cause at all. They will leave him in the lurch to be
bombarded as we are doing.
We shall return.
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E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com
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