Ghana’s education sector is grappling with a significant teacher deficit, with the country requiring between 50,000 and 90,000 additional educators to adequately staff schools nationwide, Education Minister Haruna Iddrisu has disclosed.
Speaking on the floor of Parliament on Thursday, June 18, Mr. Iddrisu revealed that despite the pressing need for more teachers, financial constraints have limited the government’s ability to recruit enough personnel to close the gap.
According to the Minister, the government was only granted financial clearance to employ 7,000 teachers, a number that falls far short of the sector’s staffing requirements.
“My need for teachers is between 50,000 and 90,000, but I had clearance for 7,000, and that is what I am making do with,” Mr. Iddrisu told Parliament.
He explained that ongoing reforms within the education sector have increased the demand for teaching staff across various institutions, including those under the Ghana Education Service (GES) and the Commission for Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET).
Mr. Iddrisu noted that the limited number of newly recruited teachers must be shared between the two institutions, making it even more challenging to meet existing staffing needs.
“The country has evolved and we have taken reforms that will benefit education in the foreseeable future. We now have the Commission for Technical and Vocational Education and the GES and so when we are recruiting, we allocate teachers for TVET and GES, but there is a difference between need and what I have budgetary approval for,” he explained.
The Minister’s remarks come amid concerns from education stakeholders and unemployed trained teachers over the government’s decision to recruit only 7,000 teachers despite the growing number of qualified graduates awaiting placement.
His comments highlight the difficult balancing act facing policymakers as they seek to improve access to quality education while operating within tight fiscal limits. The disclosure also underscores the scale of the staffing challenge confronting the sector, particularly as reforms and expanding educational institutions continue to drive demand for more teachers across the country.




























