Tema-Ghana, Jan. 27, MNN – Mr. Kofi Asare, Executive Director, the Africa Education Watch (EduWatch), an education policy research, and advocacy organization has noted that it was important to prioritize basic education infrastructure due to the growing number of schools operating under trees and in dilapidated structures.
He has, therefore, called on the Ministry of Education (MoE) to prioritize basic education infrastructure in the 2023 Ghana Education Trust Fund (GETFund) formula.
He also called on the Ministry of Finance to urgently revise the 2023 budget allocation for existing interventions which covers the critical interventions – Capitation Grant, Feeding Grants to Special Schools, and the provision of Establishment Supplies to basic schools.
Mr Asare stated in EduWatch’s analysis of the 2023 education budget for the education sector, which was made available to Myliberty News Network in Tema, and indicated that at least a third of GETFund’s discretionary expenditure must benefit basic education infrastructure.
The education policy think-tank stated that the low premium accorded basic education would not change in 2023, as only 19 percent has been allocated from the GETFund, noting that this does not auger well for expanding equitable access to basic education, especially where one million children were out of school, with millions learning in makeshift structures.
Africa Education Watch added that unfortunately, it was expected that, a significant portion of the GH¢289 million allocated to basic education for 2023 would be spent on the procurement of textbooks that were in short supply in the schools, leaving the rest for infrastructure.
Education infrastructure, it stated was heavily dependent on funding from GETFund, with the fund having on average contributed 45.37 percent of the education Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) budget for the period 2021 to 2023.
It revealed that the MoE was directed by the Ministry of Finance to offload all Government of Ghana (GoG) and Annual Budget Funding Amount (ABFA) capital projects to GETFund for payment.
“This explains the dwindling budget allocation from the government over the period. The CAPEX allocation from the government has also decreased by 80.8 percent from GH¢11.5 million in 2021 to GH¢2.2 million in 2023,” EduWatch stated.
Africa Education Watch said for the past three years, this allocation has been used for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of some dilapidated basic school structures and the payment of Counterpart Funding Obligations on some of the donor-assisted projects notably the Support to Basic Education Project being implemented with funding from the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa (BADEA).
Touching on budget allocation for the free compulsory basic education (FCUBE), the organization observed that an allocation of GH¢67.03 million representing 2.2 percent has been made for the payment of Capitation Grant, Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) subsidy, West Africa Examination Council (WAEC) Contributions and Establishment Supplies.
“This does not only represent a 58.7 percent decrease over the 2022 allocation of GH¢162.46 million, but will also pose a significant challenge during budget implementation due to the 2023 total allocation for Goods and Services to basic education,” it stated.
It stated that further evidence of inadequacy in the Goods and Services budgetary allocation for basic education was found within the GH¢26.5 million allocation for Existing Interventions, out of which only GH¢11 million was allocated for the payment of Capitation Grant.
It stressed that “at the current rate of GH¢10.0 per pupil and the projected enrolment of six million pupils in public basic schools, the said GH¢11 million cannot suffice even a term’s tranche, thereby making it impossible to provide the necessary supplies such as chalk, Class Attendance Register and other basic logistics for the operations of public basic schools in 2023.”