Accra, Dec. 19, - A report
launched by the African Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) on Tuesday urged
government to complement the free Senior High School Policy with more
investment in infrastructure at the second-cycle level.
The report noted that, while the
free SHS policy comes with equality of opportunity for qualified persons to
attain second-cycle education, foreseeable pressure on existing school
infrastructure makes the policy a self-defeating one.
“Unless more investment is made
in infrastructure provision, qualified candidates may be denied entry.
Educational quality is also likely to be affected,” the report noted.
The report titled “Leveraging
Ghana’s Oil Resources Wealth for Economic and Human Development,” carried out
by ACEP in partnership with the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES), was undertaken
to access the impact of oil revenue investment in education in Ghana.
It was launched alongside a
second report titled: “A Value for Money Analysis of Annual Budget Funding
Amount”, that was also conducted in fulfillment of ACEP’s oversight role for
the transparent, efficient and equitable use and management of Ghana’s
petroleum revenues.
According to the report on
“Leveraging Ghana’s Oil Resources Wealth for Economic and Human Development”,
education had been found to remain a critical input and dimension of human
development and economic growth.
However, current educational
attainment in Ghana does not significantly impact the country’s economic
growth.
It also revealed that basic
education in Ghana was near universal and that nearly all persons of 25 years
and above had achieved 6 years and 8 months of mean years of schooling.
This means that more efforts
needs to be invested in helping Ghanaian children advance to second-cycle level
and beyond, the report noted.
It said, revenues from Ghana’s
oil resources, definitely, have a role to play in financing education.
Ms Dorcas Koomson, an
Educationist, who launched the two reports, noted that, the importance of
education to the socio-economic development was evidenced in how every
government prioritised education and make it more accessible to all.
She said, when education was
prioritised, “then we can rub shoulders with other countries and even manage
our God-given resources that we are endowed with.”
She commended successive
governments for working to ensure a universal basic education for almost every
child in the country, expressing the hope that, with more prudent measures,
tertiary education could also be made free in future.
Mr Benjamin Boakye, the Executive
Director of ACEP, explained that the two reports assessed the extent to which
oil revenue was invested in education between 2011 and 2017, and how the report
marched with the policy objectives set out in the country’s education strategy
plans.
The plans are: Ghana Education
Strategy Plan (2010 – 2020), Education Sector Medium Term Plan (2014-2017) and
the Petroleum Revenue Management Act (2011) (Act 815) as amended.
He noted that the findings
emphasized the need to critically monitor oil revenue and make judicious use of
it to enhance equality of opportunities for all Ghanaians.
He said Ghana should learn from
the good examples of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Brazil, who had invested
petroleum resources into education and reaping the benefits in terms of higher
literacy rate, high human development achievement and high gross domestic
product per capita.
Mr Fritz Kopseiker, the Country
Director of FES, said the effective management of oil revenue was important to
ensure value for money.
He, therefore, urged Ghanaians,
especially the media, to continue to hold the state institutions and
politicians in check to ensure that they made judicious use of the country’s
natural resources.
GNA

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