• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Thursday, April 30, 2026
  • Login
The Vaultz News
  • Top Stories
  • News
    • General News
    • Education
    • Health
    • Opinions
  • Economics
    • Economy
    • Finance
      • Banking
      • Insurance
      • Pension
    • Securities/Markets
  • Business
    • Agribusiness
    • Vaultz Business
    • Extractives/Energy
    • Real Estate
  • World
    • Africa
    • America
    • Europe
    • UK
    • USA
    • Asia
    • Around the Globe
  • Innovation
    • Technology
    • Wheels
  • Entertainment
  • 20MOBPL2DNew
  • Jobs & Scholarships
    • Job Vacancies
    • Scholarships
No Result
View All Result
The Vaultz News
  • Top Stories
  • News
    • General News
    • Education
    • Health
    • Opinions
  • Economics
    • Economy
    • Finance
      • Banking
      • Insurance
      • Pension
    • Securities/Markets
  • Business
    • Agribusiness
    • Vaultz Business
    • Extractives/Energy
    • Real Estate
  • World
    • Africa
    • America
    • Europe
    • UK
    • USA
    • Asia
    • Around the Globe
  • Innovation
    • Technology
    • Wheels
  • Entertainment
  • 20MOBPL2DNew
  • Jobs & Scholarships
    • Job Vacancies
    • Scholarships
No Result
View All Result
The Vaultz News
No Result
View All Result
in General News

Agenda 111: Ill-Conceived Health Infrastructure Gamble

Evans Junior Owuby Evans Junior Owu
April 25, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read
Agenda 111 1

Renowned data and policy analyst Alfred Appiah has criticised the previous government’s flagship health infrastructure program, calling the Agenda 111 initiative a prime example of a policy that is motivated more by procurement interests than by strategic national needs.

His critical remarks bring up important issues regarding accountability, planning, and execution in Ghana’s healthcare system.

The Agenda 111 project, spearheaded by former President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, was introduced with great fanfare and marketed as a daring attempt to close the nation’s massive healthcare infrastructure deficit.

The pledge was straightforward: to construct 111 new hospitals in areas and districts that lacked sufficient infrastructure.

ADVERTISEMENT

However, after several years and more than $400 million, none of these hospitals are still in use. The Ministry of Health recently confirmed this startling fact.

The hospitals at Trede, Kokoben, and Ahanta are “95% complete,” according to a recent Ministry of Health’s statement, despite the revelation that they are still not operational.

Furthermore, the project’s total estimated cost has now risen to $1.589 billion, which is an astounding sum, particularly for a nation still dealing with debt problems and an ongoing IMF program.

Agenda 111 Trede
Health Minister Hon Kwabena Mintah Akandoh, in an earlier tour of the Trede District Hospital

In his assessment of what went wrong, Alfred Appiah was blunt in his criticism of the previous government’s hurried implementation of the Agenda 111 initiative.

“On Agenda 111, it made absolutely no sense to try to concurrently build hospitals in every district without one, using the same model, size, and cost, especially without secured funding at inception”.

Alfred Appiah, Data and Policy Analyst

His comments strike at the heart of the problem: Both the idea and the implementation of Agenda 111 had serious flaws.

The districts of Ghana are not all the same. Their geographic size, population, and distance from current tertiary or secondary healthcare facilities all differ greatly.

According to Alfred Appiah, these variations would have been taken into account in any well-considered infrastructure plan, which would have identified priority areas through a spatial analysis.

However, Agenda 111 seemed to overlook all of these subtleties. Appiah contended that a one-size-fits-all strategy was ineffective. “The project required appropriate phasing and improved design,” he remarked.

Scattergun Strategy

Alfred Appiah also noted that the government adopted a scattergun strategy that spread scarce national resources too thinly across too many locations rather than concentrating on finishing high-potential projects like the Sewua and Afari hospitals or improving tertiary facilities that were already operational but underfunded.

ADVERTISEMENT

He lamented that the outcome is an incomplete legacy of dispersed building sites and concrete skeletons without a clear plan for completion.

The motivation behind the entire endeavor is even more concerning. Appiah asserted that “procurement obviously drove policy, with contracts awarded en masse.”

Aerial view of Afari Hospital
Aerial view of Afari Hospital

Not only is administrative inefficiency implied here, but Appiah noted that there is also a more unsettling implication that commercial and political interests may have taken precedence over national health priorities.

The findings of the Health Harmonisation Assessment Report, which was co-commissioned by the Ghana Health Service, the Ministry of Health, the Global Fund, the World Health Organisation, and the Government of Ghana, further support this damning verdict. 

Only 5% of Ghanaian consultation rooms currently have the tools required to properly diagnose patients, according to the report. 

This statistic poses a risk in addition to being embarrassing. Despite hundreds of millions of dollars being invested in unfinished monuments of political overreach, it signals a public health system on the verge of collapse, devoid of essential diagnostic tools.

Appiah’s central question strikes at the heart of this issue: Who benefited in the end apart from the contractors who smiled to the bank? 

Ghanaians need to insist on answers to this question. If improving access to healthcare was the goal, the result should be measured by actual, well-equipped hospitals that serve actual people, not by the number of contracts signed or buildings that have been partially constructed.

Wide-ranging effects result from this disaster, as health outcomes continue to deteriorate and confidence in the government’s capacity to carry out ambitious national projects is eroding.

Furthermore, the economic cost is growing intolerable in both opportunity and actual monetary terms as people are forced to face the sobering fact that billions of dollars have been spent, but the health system is still dangerously underfunded, disjointed, and primarily dysfunctional.

Alfred Appiah 1
Alfred Appiah, Data and Policy Analyst

Agenda 111 may ultimately be remembered as one of the most costly examples of how public policy should not be planned and carried out.

For the present and upcoming administrations, it serves as a warning that infrastructure is more than just physical structures; it also involves the careful balancing of needs, resources, and governance.

Ghana deserved better, and the next big project could end just as badly if difficult questions are not asked and addressed.

“We spent petroleum revenues, some contractors and architects got paid, and the country is left with uncompleted buildings and no clear plan to finish and operationalise them.” 

Alfred Appiah, Data and Policy Analyst

For a country battling limited fiscal space, rising healthcare demand, and widespread inequality, such alleged reckless mismanagement is not just a political failure—it is a betrayal of the people.

READ ALSO: Eni Secures Funding to Launch Liverpool Bay CCS 

Sign Up to Our Newsletter

Fresh updates, Straight to your inbox

Tags: Agenda 111Alfred AppiahGhana Health InfrastructureGhana Health ServiceHealth Harmonisation ReportHospital ConstructionMinistry of HealthPetroleum revenuesProcurementUncompleted HospitalsWHO
Share5Tweet3Share1SendSend
Please login to join discussion
Previous Post

GTA to Introduce Paragliding Tourism in Ghana’s Volta Region

Next Post

IMF Cannot Be Sole Watchdog Over Ghana’s Economy – Simons

Related Posts

Dr. John Osae-Kwapong, Democracy and Development Fellow, CDD-Ghana, and Project Director, the Democracy Project
General News

Ghana Witnessing Legal Correction, Institutional Setback in Corruption Fight – Osae-Kwapong

April 30, 2026
Screenshot 20260430 170305 Chrome
General News

CSA Warns Public Over Rising Business Impersonation Fraud

April 30, 2026
Professor Stephen Kwaku Asare, CDD-Ghana Fellow
General News

Authorization Inspectors Throw ORAL into Reverse Gear – Legal Scholar Warns

April 30, 2026
Honourable Jerry Ahmed Shaib, Member of Parliament for Weija-Gbawe Constituency and Deputy Minority Whip
General News

Deputy Minority Whip Cautions Against Decline In Public Political Discourse

April 30, 2026

Sign Up to Our Newsletter

Fresh updates, Straight to your inbox

Recent News

Hon. Emelia Arthur, Minister for Fisheries and Aquaculture Development

Blue Ventures Partnership Overhauls Failed Fisheries Governance Models

April 30, 2026
Dr. John Osae-Kwapong, Democracy and Development Fellow, CDD-Ghana, and Project Director, the Democracy Project

Ghana Witnessing Legal Correction, Institutional Setback in Corruption Fight – Osae-Kwapong

April 30, 2026
First National Bank Introduces Bespoke Luxury Banking Services

First National Bank Introduces Bespoke Luxury Banking Services

April 30, 2026
GSA's Meeting for Land-Based Fish Processing Establishments

GSA Compliance Tactics to Save Ghana’s Fish Exports From Rejection

April 30, 2026
GoldBod CEO with E&P CEO

E&P Sells Off 100% Proceed from Damang Gold Mine to GoldBod

April 30, 2026
Next Post
Bright Simons, IMF, Government

IMF Cannot Be Sole Watchdog Over Ghana’s Economy - Simons

The Vaultz News

Copyright © 2025 The Vaultz News. All rights reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Top Stories
  • News
    • General News
    • Education
    • Health
    • Opinions
  • Economics
    • Economy
    • Finance
      • Banking
      • Insurance
      • Pension
    • Securities/Markets
  • Business
    • Agribusiness
    • Vaultz Business
    • Extractives/Energy
    • Real Estate
  • World
    • Africa
    • America
    • Europe
    • UK
    • USA
    • Asia
    • Around the Globe
  • Innovation
    • Technology
    • Wheels
  • Entertainment
  • 20MOBPL2D
  • Jobs & Scholarships
    • Job Vacancies
    • Scholarships

Copyright © 2025 The Vaultz News. All rights reserved.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.

Discover the Details behind the story

Get an in-depth analysis of the news from our top editors

Enter your email address