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On NDC’s proposed People’s Manifesto: Please don’t review and cancel Akufo-Addo’s Free SHS!

Ndc Supporters Ek4485 File photo

Fri, 8 Nov 2019 Source: Kwaku Badu

If you may remember, the NDC’s 2020 flagbearer, former President Mahama, in a swift response to a benign comment by Dr Bawumia, the then running mate to candidate Akufo-Addo, made it clear that he can only take advice from our two former presidents, Kufuor and Rawlings. So what has changed?

Is former President Mahama now ready to take advice from Ghanaians who have never sat on the presidential throne?

It would thus appear that the People’s Manifesto proposal is a desperate attempt to win the election and then spurn the unsuspecting voters one more time.

Let us, therefore, be honest, the People’s Manifesto proposal is destitute of honesty and integrity.

Take, for instance, if the erstwhile Mahama administration could not implement the Manifesto promise of one-time NHIS premium, where is the guarantee that the proposed People’s Manifesto would be honoured?

Dearest reader, if Mahama could not even complete a quarter of his own Manifesto promise of building 200 secondary schools within a four year period, how can he honour the People’s Manifesto?

Well, since the NDC operatives are busy calling all sorts of press conferences on every trivial issue, and therefore cannot find time to brainstorm and put a Manifesto together, I would like to propose: for the sake of the unborn generation, please do not review and abandon Akufo-Addo’s Free SHS.

Education, as a matter of fact and observation, is fundamental to development and growth, and therefore the pragmatic approach to improving accessibility and quality is not through the usual political rhetoric, but through well-thought through policies.

Thus, it is prudent for Akufo-Addo’s government to seek to bridge the ever widening social inequalities gap through rational distribution of national resources in the form of Free SHS.

It is, therefore, quite disturbing that despite the associated benefits, no less a person than Ex-President Mahama could find it somewhat convenient to chastise Akufo-Addo for judiciously implementing the Free SHS policy, allegedly, at the expense of other developmental projects (see: ‘Free SHS crippling other sectors-Mahama, classfmonline.com/ghanaweb.com, 24/02/2018).

Former President Mahama lamented during one of the NDC’s unity health walks: “The problem this government is facing and it is in their own interest, is that, Free Senior High School is absorbing all the fiscal space they have and so almost every money you have, you are having to put it into Free Senior High School. So you can’t pay District Assemblies Common Fund, you can’t pay NHIS (National Health Insurance Scheme), you can’t pay GET Fund (Ghana Education Trust Fund), you can’t pay other salaries and things because all your money is going into Free Senior High School.”

With all due respect with no attached condescension whatsoever, Ex-President Mahama’s assessment of the situation does not add up. In fact, there is absolutely no truth in his assessment of the situation.

At worst, his analysis is flawed, in the sense that the Free SHS programme has its own allocated budgetary funds, obviously, separate from the other sectors.

Take my word for it, dearest reader, I am not seeking to engage in any pathetic political equalisation, far from it. But it is important to note that during his tenure in office, former President Mahama did not spend a pesewa on Free SHS, and yet he left huge arrears amid unpaid salaries, crippled NHIS, malfunctioned School Feeding programme, amongst others.

So, does former President Mahama want to tell discerning Ghanaians that he wilfully misused the funds, and hence his inability to manage those sectors efficiently?

Considering the fact that the erstwhile Mahama administration wilfully left behind a huge debt amidst economic meltdown, it is, indeed, commendable for Akufo-Addo’s government to afford to implement the seemingly admirable, albeit costly social intervention such as Free SHS.

The opposition NDC’s incessant criticisms of the Free SHS implementation is appalling, so to speak.

We can, therefore, draw an adverse inference that Mahama does not fancy the Free SHS, and hence needlessly keep criticising its implementation.

Given that the NDC faithful had the brashness to campaign and vote against the poverty reduction Free SHS policy during the 2016 election, it will not come as a surprise at all if the future NDC government decides to abolish the policy altogether.

Sometimes, one cannot help but to admire some of our politicians for their incredible dexterity in systematic propagation of propaganda.

Given the circumstances, we can stress that the NDC has a penchant for reversing crucial national programmes and policies without any tangible reasons.

Some of us, in fact, were flabbergasted over the NDC’s hasty and needless termination and replacement of the conventional educational system (Ordinary and Advanced Levels) with the apparent communist Junior Secondary School model.

But, as to whether the Junior Secondary School system has been successful in juxtaposition with the old school system, is a million dollar question that I will leave to the conscience of discerning Ghanaians.

In fact, the NDC hierarchy’s unfailing enthusiasm in reversing important national policies without basis did not end at the abolition of the old school system, but they also needlessly altered the secondary school nomenclature (SSS to SHS).

As if that was not enough, the four-year Senior Secondary School system was ponderously reversed to three-year cycle to the utter dismay of most discerning Ghanaians.

The list is not exhaustive and it would only take a disputatious character to contend that the future NDC government won’t reverse crucial national policies and programmes like the Free SHS, one district one factory, NABCO, one million dollar per constituency amongst others.

After all, didn’t the erstwhile Mahama government wilfully run down the crucial social interventions to the chagrin of discerning Ghanaians?

Indeed, the erstwhile Mahama’s government abysmally ran down and cancelled most of the crucial social interventions to the disgust of discerning Ghanaians.

The Nurse’s Allowance, the Teacher’s Allowance, SADA, GYEEDA, NHIS, the Maternal Care, the School Feeding programme and the Mass Transport System readily come to mind.

You would think that individuals who pride themselves as social democrats will be extremely empathetic to the needs of the masses, but this is not the case with the NDC apparatchiks.

It would thus appear that the NDC apparatchiks only sing along the social democratic rendition and then turn their back on the masses. It is an illustrative case of social democrats who do not know how to initiate and manage social interventions.

The poverty alleviation Free SHS policy, as a matter of fact, will bring enormous benefits to the students, parents and the nation as a whole.

What is more pleasing to some of us is that, the social mobility improvement Free SHS policy should at least provide a sound and congenial environment for the students to develop to their full potential and to have a reasonable chance of leading productive and creative lives.

However, we cannot vouch for the sustainability of the free SHS policy, should Ghanaians make a terrible mistake and hand over the poverty alleviation free SHS programme back to the NDC in the near future.

Our fears stem from the fact that since the implementation of the free SHS policy by the NPP government, the minority NDC operatives have gathered momentum and called uncountable press conferences with the view to discrediting the policy’s implementation.

Somehow, the minority NDC operatives prefer “progressively free” (whatever that means) to NPP’s comprehensively free.

In fact, unless I come across as the worst performer in mathematics, I cannot fathom how and why the NDC’s GH48 per student is better than the NPP’s GH1844.27 per student a year.

Whatever the case, some of us cannot accept the minority NDC operatives somewhat spurious argument. Well, they may choose to call it progressively free or comprehensively free, the fact however remains that the policy will return huge benefits in the long run.

Indeed, the vast majority of Ghanaians will benefit immensely from the policy, including my maternal uncle, Oliver, a diehard NDC supporter, who had earlier criticised the apparent poverty alleviation Free SHS.

But despite Uncle Oliver’s needless pessimism, he is likely to reap tremendous benefits and will most likely decline to endorse Mahama to review and cancel such an advantageous policy.

Credible sources have it that the government will spend not less than GH5532.83 over a period of three years on each student.

This means that Uncle Oliver, who has three of his children in SHS, will be pocketing not less than GH16598.49 over three years.

Given the huge benefits, who can persuade my maternal uncle, Oliver, to turn down such a juicy offer and vote for the unrepentant critic of the Free SHS who is going to review and possibly abandon the policy?

It is quite unfortunate to observe how some Ghanaians could easily give in to the manipulating politicians vague rhetoric and vile propaganda designed to advance their vested interests.

My maternal uncle, Oliver, as a matter of fact, was among the millions of impoverished Ghanaians who were brainwashed by the cunning and manipulating politicians to reject the expedient Free SHS offer during the 2016 electioneering campaign.

Let us be honest, if everyone else had voted the same way as Uncle Oliver did, I am not sure his three children would have benefited from any free SHS.

In ending, some of us, in fact, do not anticipate Uncle Oliver and the likes benefiting from the Free SHS policy should Ghanaians make a terrible mistake and hand it over to the NDC government in the near future.

K. Badu, UK.

k.badu2011@gmail.com

Columnist: Kwaku Badu