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Tertiary students will suffer if gov’t weans off tertiary institutions from payroll

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The Deputy Ranking Member On the Education Committee of Parliament, Dr Clement Apaak has taken a strong indication that if the government goes ahead to wean tertiary institutions off-payroll it will invariably restrict as well as prevent poor and marginalized applicants from accessing tertiary education.

Dr Apaak who doubles as the Member of Parliament for Builsa South further indicated that the proposal seeks to create a path for the institutions to start raising their own revenue to pay for the human resources.

Below is the MP’s full writeup, copied to A1radioonline.com

“IMPLICATIONS OF WEANING PUBLIC TERTIARY INSTITUTIONS OFF GOVERNMENT SUBVENTIONS

As part of measures to address the self-inflicted economic crisis Ghana is facing under the Akufo-Addo government, the beleaguered Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, with the support of Mr Akufo-Addo has proposed to wean public tertiary institutions off the public payroll.

However, it is our position that the proposal to wean public tertiary institutions off the public payroll be dropped completely, because it will invariably restrict access to tertiary education and will prevent the poor and marginalised from accessing tertiary education when implemented.

In his statement, the Minister said, that the following measures will be implemented over the medium-term under Financing and Currency Measures, referring to the procedure of his document of presentation: “Wean-off public tertiary institutions from government payroll and provide them with a fixed amount “block grant,” instead.

Essentially, what the Minister is saying is that government intends to no longer shoulder the cost of paying lecturers and staff of the tertiary institutions. As such, tertiary institutions would have to raise their own revenue to pay for the human resources required to function as institutions of higher learning.

For tertiary institutions under prevailing circumstances raising the needed resources to pay teaching and non-teaching staff, it will likely require passing a chunk of the bill to students, resulting in higher school fees. Higher fees will be to the detriment of poor students who are even struggling to pay the current fees.

When public tertiary institutions become fee-paying, then obviously, the government is directly introducing a financial barrier to the already existing infrastructural barrier.

In any case, why would government increase access by making secondary education free, and propose to restrict access by essentially making the cost of obtaining tertiary education by beneficiaries of free secondary education exorbitant?

This proposal, if implemented, would negate any gains that free SHS intended to achieve. For a government that believes that parents cannot afford to pay school fees for their wards at the senior high level to now turn around to demand full fee-paying from the same at the tertiary level, is to say that there is a lack of appreciation of the whole policy intervention at the secondary level.

On an interesting note only last year, President Akufo-Addo in his attendance made a point in his speech at the Global Education Summit held in the UK, that government was considering free tertiary education. The turnaround by Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta makes the exact policy direction of this government on education a wonder.

Public tertiary institutions, aside from their assured quality, are intended to provide an even platform for all, including the poor to access higher education leading to their contributing their quota to the development of this country.

It is in light of the above that government must rethink any measures that are intended to prevent the poor from having access to educational opportunities at the tertiary level.

Dr Clement Apaak
M.P, Builsa South and Deputy Ranking Member On Education Committee of Parliament”

A1radioonline.com|101.1 MHz|Moses Apiah|Bolgatanga|Ghana

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