Hon. Okudzeto Ablakwa’s 2020 WASSCE Analysis Very Shallow & Misleading - NPP

The NPP-USA has taken note of an article on social media authored by Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, MP for North Tongu, with some unusual misrepresentation of facts, and mischief ridden analysis.

The group, in a statement, described Okudzeto's analysis as shallow and misleading.

Hon. Okudzeto Ablakwa, speaking on the final year students writing their WASSCE, stated that "...President Akufo-Addo’s much-touted Free SHS policy which the NDC has always maintained could have been better implemented without Double Track and the attendant suffocating congestion; WASSCE candidate numbers have seen an unimpressive increase from the 2016 figure of 274,262 to 313,837 in 2020. This works out to an actual increase of a relatively low 39,575 *or a mere 14.4%*. Therefore, in four years - President Mahama increased WASSCE candidates by 99,801 while President Akufo-Addo has increased the same by only 39,575. A striking difference of 60,226. President Akufo-Addo's comparative increase is far less than half of what his counterpart, President Mahama achieved in the same four year period”.

But NPP USA setting the records straight said: "We rebut that the total number of registered SHS students for the 2020 WASSCE Examinations is 375,737 as against the 274,262 students registered in 2016. A fact that can be crossed checked with WAEC or from their website https://www.waecgh.org/wassce. Thus, an astronomical increase in excess of 100,000 students have gotten access to free quality education, students who otherwise would have been denied SHS education in the past but for the free SHS introduced by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akuffo Addo and the NPP government.

"The cost of expenditure on the 375,737 students taking the exams, as the first beneficiaries of the free SHS was budgeted for and paid by the NPP government, ensuring expanded access to education as compared to the 274,262 students that paid for their SHS education themselves under John Mahama as President. Clearly, free SHS saved these students and their families this cost and also increased or expanded intake in excess of 100,000 students”, the statement further read.

Read full statement below:

Stick to the Facts, Hon. Samuel Okudjato Ablakwa, MP*

The NPP-USA has taken note of an article on social media authored by Hon. Ablakwa Okujato, MP for North Tongu, with the usual misrepresentation of facts, and mischief ridden analysis undeserving to have come from a member of parliament and a former deputy minister of education as such in recent past.

We deemed the analysis shallow, qualitatively poor in content and seriously misleading. As such, we wish to respond by setting the facts of the issue devoid of propaganda and mischief as follows:

We rebut that the total number of registered SHS students for the 2020 WASSCE Examinations is 375,737 as against the 274,262 students registered in 2016. A fact that can be crossed checked with WAEC or from their website https://www.waecgh.org/wassce. Thus, an astronomical increase in excess of 100,000 students have gotten access to free quality education, students who otherwise would have been denied SHS education in the past but for the free SHS introduced by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akuffo Addo and the NPP government.

Any discussion of numbers cannot be complete without the qualitative assessment and narrative of the Free SHS as per the following:

A. The cost of expenditure on the 375,737 students taking the exams, as the first beneficiaries of the free SHS was budgeted for and paid by the NPP government, ensuring expanded access to education as compared to the 274,262 students that paid for their SHS education themselves under John Mahama as President. Clearly, free SHS saved these students and their families this cost and also increased or expanded intake in excess of 100,000 students.

B. The policy of 30% allocation for students from poor performing schools or communities into high performing schools is an issue of social equity and has greater impact for such students and our country.

C. The massive provision of infrastructure being built through innovative and unprecedented pre-financing arrangements such as securitization is a big game changer and an efficient use of public funds for maximum benefits.

D. The revamp of the Ghana Buffer Stock company and the provision of food to the students under Free SHS ensures that suppliers no longer hunt headmasters for the payment for food supplied to their schools. Additionally, each day student is given at least one free meal each school day.

The above, notwithstanding taking the number of final year students in any one year as a measure of success of the flagship policy is simplistic and mediocre at best. The program covers all students from SHS 1 to SHS3, and the benefits cannot be limited to a shallow and myopic analysis of only the first batch of beneficiaries sitting or exiting the program via the 2020 WASSCE exams.

Facts do not cease to exist just because a sitting MP and a former Minister of Education has chosen to ignore it with laziness. Any debate on the successes and challenges of the Free SHS is welcoming, but it must be done in its proper context with candor and respect to the people of Ghana who have embraced it perpetually.

We remain informed citizens!