• About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
Sunday, June 15, 2025
MyPublisher24
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Crime
  • Health
  • World News
  • Features & Opinions
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Crime
  • Health
  • World News
  • Features & Opinions
No Result
View All Result
Morning News
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Stakeholders kick against plans to wean public tertiary institutions from gov’t payroll

Osumanu Al-Hassan by Osumanu Al-Hassan
April 11, 2022
in News
0
UG Dean of Student Affairs, another cited for contempt of court
0
SHARES
40
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterWhatsapp

Campaign Against the Privatization and Commercialization of Education (CAPCOE) and its partners in the education sector have made a passionate appeal to the government to continue to absorb the full cost of staff salaries in public tertiary institutions in order to maintain tertiary fees at reasonable levels.

The call, according to the group, is premised on the fact that it is the responsibility of the government to provide equal access to tertiary education.

READ ALSO

Messi’s Inter Miami held by Al Ahly at FIFA Club World Cup

2025 Ghana Football Awards: Thomas Partey adjudged Footballer of the Year

According to CAPCOE, the government’s proposed policy to wean off public tertiary institutions from its payroll and provide them with an annual ‘block amount’ would compel these institutions to attempt to generate their own revenue to pay a substantial part of their staff budget.

It indicated that though the proposed policy would contribute to fiscal discipline when implemented, it will however come with potential undesirable outcomes including charging unrealistic higher fees and reduction in access to tertiary education by the poor.

A statement issued by CAPCOE and its partners including NUGS, USAG, Ghana National Education Campaign Coalition, All Africa Students’ Union and the Africa Education Watch indicated the proposal does not only depict policy incoherence but also contradicts the government’s own plan to increase Gross Tertiary Enrolment (GTER) from 18% to 40% by 2030.

Equitable access through the removal of cost barriers, it noted, are key strategies to achieve this audacious enrollment target.

“We are also informed of the justification being made by some members of UTAG and Vice-Chancellors that charging realistic fees is the way to go in improving quality, citing the examples of European countries that have successfully implemented similar cost-shifting initiatives.”

“It is noteworthy that the existence of adequate safety nets for poor students through a responsive student’s loan and a meritorious, transparent and accountable scholarships systems has been critical to maintaining equity regardless of the introduction of fees in these countries.”

According to CAPCOE, in the case of Ghana the equity context for the introduction of fees is absent because the students’ loan and scholarship systems are not responsive to the needs of poor students as both are disbursed towards the end of the academic year, instead of arriving before the academic year when poor prospective students require funding to honour their admissions.

Public scholarship schemes, it said, continue to operate in opacity without any accountability or certainty of access based on merit.

CAPCOE warned that in the absence of adequate safety nets to protect poor and needy students, the proposal will increase the cost of accessing tertiary education and pose a major economic barrier to accessing tertiary education by the poor.

The statement proposed additional measures that it said if the Minister of Education considers will reduce fiscal pressures on the education budget without necessarily transferring any part of the responsibility for tertiary salaries to the tertiary institution.

The measures, CAPCOE said, include intensification of domestic resource mobilization to shore up local revenues to finance social services provisioning; Urgently passing and implementing the Exemptions Bill with the same priority given to the e-levy; drastic measures to minimize financial waste in the education sector by departing from the culture of single source procurement items and adopt the culture of competitive procurement to assure greater Value For Money in the education sector; and invest in an export driven economy by promoting value addition to raw materials such as gold, cocoa and crude oil to enhance foreign exchange earnings potential and reduce inflationary pressures.

Tags: governmentpayrollPublic Tertiary Institutionsstakeholders

Related Posts

FIFA Club World Cup
News

Messi’s Inter Miami held by Al Ahly at FIFA Club World Cup

June 15, 2025
Footballer
News

2025 Ghana Football Awards: Thomas Partey adjudged Footballer of the Year

June 15, 2025
EC Chairperson, Ablekuma North collation, Elikplim Akurugu, decision, APC
News

EC Chairperson to appear before Parliament next week

June 14, 2025
NSA, NSS
News

NSA fraud cost state over GH₵548 million – Attorney-General

June 14, 2025
positions, December 7
Main

GJA 2025 Elections: Candidates ballot for positions as Committee pledges free and fair polls

June 14, 2025
Police,Kasoa,robbery
Crime

Police arrest 19 in anti-drug and robbery in Kasoa

June 14, 2025
Next Post
Duffuor’s NDC 2024 political strategists out – Spio-Garbrah, Fritz Baffour & others make list

Duffuor’s NDC 2024 political strategists out – Spio-Garbrah, Fritz Baffour & others make list

POPULAR NEWS

Lighthouse chapel

Lighthouse Chapel Case: 6 Ex-Pastors Demand $12 Million Settlement

April 30, 2023
aircraft

Light House Brouhaha: Kofi Bentil Exposed Over $12M Settlement Deal

April 24, 2023
SSNIT Exonerates Lighthouse; Six Renegade EX-Pastors Shamed

SSNIT Exonerates Lighthouse; Six Renegade EX-Pastors Shamed

April 24, 2023
Kwaku Azar writes: Until a prima facie case is established

Akufo-Addo Nominates Gertrude Torkornoo As New Chief Justice

June 12, 2025
Lighthouse Brouhaha: Larry Odonkor charged with Stealing

Lighthouse Brouhaha: Larry Odonkor charged with Stealing

April 24, 2023

EDITOR'S PICK

Charles Bissue pulls out of NPP’s General Secretary race 3 days to polls

Charles Bissue sues OSP & Anas to pause galamsey investigations

December 24, 2022
We’re vindicated; probe $1.3b GNPC Aker-AGM deal – Minority

Minority MPs reject approval of 2 Supreme Court nominees

March 24, 2023
BVR, polling stations, Guarantor system, assembly elections, registered voter, NDC allegation

Assin North by-election: EC dismisses NDC allegation of plot to insert candidate’s name in voters register

June 5, 2023
open arms, August, Ghanaians living abroad, to Catholic, Banda Traditional, anti-LGBTQ bill if, Fintech Fund

‘If elections were in August 2024, Bawumia would have polled about 30%’ – Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu

March 17, 2025

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

Important Links

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Crime
  • Health
  • World News
  • Features & Opinions

Recent Posts

  • Messi’s Inter Miami held by Al Ahly at FIFA Club World Cup
  • 2025 Ghana Football Awards: Thomas Partey adjudged Footballer of the Year
  • Climate change impact, a looming national crisis
  • GRA postpones GH₵1 fuel levy implementation

Archives

  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

© 2025 mypublisher24 - All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Crime
  • Health
  • World News
  • Features & Opinions

© 2025 mypublisher24 - All rights reserved.