The Deputy Ranking Member Committee on Education in Parliament, Dr. Clement Apaak has questioned why the government has two different figures on how much has been spent on Free Senior High School (FSHS) within five-years.
According to him, the Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta has GHC 7.62 billion spent on FSHS within five years whiles the Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia in his recent public engagement also mentioned GHC 5.2 billion as spent within the same period on FSHS.
“The GHC 5.3b figure quoted by Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, is radically less than what the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta presented to Parliament in response to a question on funding fSHS from 2017-2021, I asked in 2021.
“The difference, is a whopping GHC 2.3b. Mr. Ofori-Atta, also a member of the Economic Management Team (EMT), told Parliament government had expended GHC 7.62b. I challenged, and continue to doubt his figure of GHC 7.62b because in the 2020 Mid-Year Review Buget, he reported GHC 3.2b. And if the allocation of GHC 1.9b (1,974,021,968) for 2021 was added, the total will amount to GHC 5.2b (5,174,021,968), at most, not GHC 7.62b,” the Builsa South MP disclosed in a statement.
He continued “Ghanaians ought to demand that the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government accounts for a discovered additional expenditure on the back of fSHS. This call is justified by the GHC 5.3b figure announced by Dr. Bawumia as the cost of fSHS in five years. Clearly, a big difference of GHC 2.3b exists between GHC 5.3b (Bawumia) and GHC 7.62b (Ofori-Atta).”
Below is the full statement from the Deputy Ranking Member on Education
HOW MUCH HAS GOVERNMENT SPENT ON FSHS IN 5 YEARS, GHC 5.3B OR 7.62B – VICE PRESIDENT CONTRADICTS FINANCE MINISTER
I had good reason to doubt and to challenge the figure of GHC 7.62b, quoted by the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, in response to my question to him on the total cost of funding free Senior High School (fSHS) from 2017-2021; restated and captured by him at page 49, paragraph 284, in the 2021 Mid-Year Review Budget.
To back my doubts, I also demonstrate (see below), helped by the Finance Minister’s own answers to my question on fSHS expenditure, content of the 2020 Mid-Year Review Budget he presented to Parliament, the 2021 Budget Statement to Parliament and the 2021 Mid-Year Review of the Budget, that the quoted GHC 7.62b expenditure was hugely inflated by GHC 2.4b. In furtherance, I furnish additional details (see below) which show, that from 2017 to 2021 it cost GHC 5.2b to fund fSHS, and not GHC 7.62b, as the figure he bandied about.
Guess what, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, head of the Economic Management Team (EMT), in his recent lecture on the economy, has provided figures which also cast grave doubt on the cost of fSHS in the said five years. In fact Dr Bawumia’s figure is way below the GHC 7.62b the Minister of Finance reported on the floor of parliament and in the 2021 Mid-Year Review Buget.
On April 7, 2022, the Vice President of the Republic of Ghana, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, delivered a public lecture titled, “The State Of The Economy.” Under the subheading, Fiscal Balance and Debt, on page 30, Dr Bawumia presented data in Table 6 titled, “Expenditure On Flagship Projects.”
According to him, the data (Table 6) shows details of the expenditure on all flagship programmes over the five-year period between 2017 and 2021 in review, amounted to GHC 15.62b (page 29). The first item in Table 6 (page 30) under, Flagship Projects, is Free SHS. The corresponding Expenditure (Releases) 2017-2021, shows GHC 5.3b.
Again, under the subheading, “The Suffering Of Ghanaians,” Dr. Bawumia notes the following under item 25 on page 116, “We have implemented the free senior high school initiative, providing free tuition, uniforms, textbooks and food to students and saving parents of over 1.2 million children significant amounts per child for each year of senior high school”. Dr Bawumia then proceeded to confirm his earlier data on fSHS expenditure as GHC 5.3b in five years under, “A Summary of Payments (Releases) Made to Cushion Ghanaians in the last 5 years include: fSHS – Ghc 5.3b.”
The GHC 5.3b figure quoted by Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, is radically less than what the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta presented to Parliament in response to a question on funding fSHS from 2017-2021, I asked in 2021. The difference, is a whopping GHC 2.3b. Mr Ofori-Atta, also a member of the Economic Management Team (EMT), told Parliament government had expended GHC 7.62b. I challenged, and continue to doubt his figure of GHC 7.62b because in the 2020 Mid-Year Review Buget, he reported GHC 3.2b. And if the allocation of GHC 1.9b (1,974,021,968) for 2021 was added, the total will amount to GHC 5.2b (5,174,021,968), at most, not GHC 7.62b.
When I pressed further for an explanation as to why fSHS expenditure shot up by GHC 2.4b in just one year (2020-2021), he claimed the leap could be due to unplanned expenditure related to the procurement of PPEs to keep teachers and students safe in the wake of COVID-19. Ken Ofori-Atta repeated the cost of funding Free SHS programme as GHC 7.62b in the 2021 Mid-Year Review Buget as presented to Parliament.
Ken Ofori-Atta’s feeble effort to blame this unexplained additional expenses on PPEs and preparing schools for reopening, is exposed by his own documents. In the same 2021 Mid-Year Fiscal Policy Review on page 101, Appendix 4E, he stated that GHC598 million was allocated and released as COVID-19 expenditure to prepare schools for mass reopening. As well, the Committee on Health was informed that the Ministry of Health also spent another GHC96 million on PPEs for the Ministry of Education when the Ministry of Health attended upon the Committee on Health to defend its budget request for 2022.
For emphasis and to make clear the contradictory cost assigned to the cost of the fSHS in five years, by the Vice President and the Minister for Finance, it is worth restating that the cost assigned to fSHS in five years as presented by Dr. Bawumia at his lecture, is GHC 5.3b – a whooping GHC 2.3b less than what the Finance Minister told Members of Parliament on the floor of Parliament of the Republic and Ghanaians. My analysis, however, puts the figure at GHC 2.4b, less what the Minister for Finance presented. See my analysis below:
- In the 2020 Mid-Year Review of the Budget Statement and Economic Policy (July 23, 2020) on page 2, paragraph 9, government reported a total of GHC 3.2b (3,200,000,000) was spent on fSHS, since its inception (2017-2020).
- On page 241 of the 2021 Budget Statement and Economic Policy (March 12, 2021) government allocated GHC 1.9b (1,974,021,968) to the fSHS programme, which is listed as item 4 in Appendix 6.
- Based on items 1 and 2 above, the total expenses on fSHS by the end of 2021 should be GHC 5 2b (5,174,021,968b from 2017-2021).
- However in the 2021 Mid-Year Fiscal Policy Review of the Budget Statement and Economic Policy (July 29, 2021) on page 49, paragraph 284, it is captured, that since the inception of the fSHS, government invested GHC 7.62b (7,620,000,000) to implement the fSHS programme.
- Based on items 4 and 5 above, government expended an additional GHC 2.4b (2,445,978,032) on the fSHS programme, which was not budgeted for in the 2021 budget. So far, all efforts to get government to account for this extra GHC 2.4b, has failed. This has been long after the Minister of Finance failed to tell Parliament exactly what accounted for the additional expense on the fateful Wednesday July 21, 2021 (Official report columns 044 to 045).
Ghanaians have a right to know the actual and true expenditure of fSHS; and/or cost associated with fSHS for the last five years. The fact, that two top government officials – both key members of the EMT and constant cabinet meeting attendees – provided two conflicting expenditure associated with fSHS, justifies a probe.
Ghanaians ought to demand that the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government accounts for a discovered additional expenditure on the back of fSHS. This call is justified by the GHC 5.3b figure announced by Dr. Bawumia as the cost of fSHS in five years. Clearly, a big difference of GHC 2.3b exists between GHC 5.3b (Bawumia) and GHC 7.62b (Ofori-Atta).
One thing stands out clear, fSHS did not cost the Ghanaian tax payer GHC 7.62b in five years as mouthed by Ken Ofori-Atta, the Minister of Finance. The question then is, what was a discovered additional expenditure of GHC 2.4b, demonstrated in analysis above; or a discovered additional GHC 2.3b, based on the data presented by Dr Bawumia, used for?
Dr. Clement Apaak
M.P, Builsa South and Deputy Ranking Member Committee on Education
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