Do you know what NEIP is? The National Entrepreneurship and Innovation Programme was created to help startups grow, support entrepreneurs, and create jobs through public funding and structured business support. That is the promise. And when public money backs that promise, citizens deserve more than announcements. They deserve proof.
Kofi Ofosu Nkansah is currently assisting the National Intelligence Bureau (NIB) following his own public claims that scholarships at the Ghana Scholarship Secretariat were allegedly being sold for as much as GH¢100,000. Those claims were serious enough to trigger official scrutiny. Context matters. He is the former Chief Executive Officer of NEIP under the Akufo-Addo Bawumia administration, and even before this latest episode, his tenure carried lingering questions about transparency, financial discipline, and accountability.
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To be fair, no court has convicted him. Allegations remain allegations until proven otherwise. But accountability in public service does not begin only when a judge speaks. It begins the moment public resources are entrusted to a public official.
During his time at NEIP, the programme sometimes felt less like a tightly regulated public institution and more like a discretionary office powered by public money and public explanations. Big impact claims were announced confidently, yet independent verification never moved with the same urgency. Ghanaians heard the figures clearly: 45,000 entrepreneurs trained, 9,350 businesses funded, 92,000 jobs reportedly created. These are national development claims. Yet the audit trail expected to validate them has never enjoyed the level of public clarity those numbers demand.
Public finance rests on traceability. Under Ghana’s public financial management framework, state expenditure must be auditable and defensible. Public programmes are fiduciary responsibilities, not branding exercises. Public money requires public proof.
When publicity outruns verification, doubt follows. That is not hostility. It is citizens protecting their stake. Without a clearly visible independent audit during that period, the public was effectively asked to trust claims without supporting institutional evidence. Trust without documentation is not accountability. It is assumption. And assumption cannot anchor sound governance.
Then came the staffing questions that surfaced after his departure. Reports suggested staff operating outside standard public service payroll structures, allowances replacing formal salaries, and unresolved questions about tax deductions, pension contributions, and whether funds intended for entrepreneurship support were indirectly financing employment arrangements not properly regularized. If accurate, those practices raise compliance concerns across tax law, social security obligations, and public financial management standards. That is not administrative flexibility. That is institutional vulnerability.
Leadership is rarely tested when applause is loud. It is tested when records are examined. When a successor feels compelled to suspend staff to clarify legal and financial ambiguities, the legacy left behind deserves scrutiny. Institutions grounded in strong controls do not usually require emergency stabilization whenever leadership changes.
There is also the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) investigation from January 2024. Allegations suggested funds linked to NEIP may have reached political delegates during a parliamentary primary contest. Allegations are not convictions and due process must prevail. But the principle is straightforward: public funds must never appear politically transferable. Once that perception takes hold, confidence in the programme suffers.
Public money and political money must never share a wallet. That principle protects both democracy and development.
This goes beyond one individual. It affects every Ghanaian who believed NEIP existed to support entrepreneurship rather than political positioning. It affects young founders wondering whether opportunity still rests on merit. It affects taxpayers who expect their contributions to build enterprises, not controversies.
Ofosu Nkansah’s scholarship allegation now under NIB review does not introduce a new controversy; it simply reopens lingering accountability questions from his NEIP years.
Some of his supporters, many of them openly partisan and some tied to the same patronage culture that fueled past controversies such as the alleged cash-for-scholarship episode during Kingsley Agyeman’s tenure, continue to point to programme launches, media visibility, and activity levels as proof of success. Activity alone does not equal integrity. Visibility does not guarantee compliance. Statistics without verification do not constitute governance. Outputs must withstand audits, not just applause.
Ghana’s deeper challenge is normalisation. We normalise big claims without audits. We normalise irregular staffing until crises expose them. We normalise investigations as political theatre instead of governance warnings. That cycle weakens institutions more than any single controversy.
Trust is economic capital. When it declines, investment hesitates, participation drops, and development slows. That is not theory. It is lived governance reality.
NEIP was meant to be a ladder for innovation. Under questionable stewardship, it sometimes looked like a ladder some could access while others kept searching for it. Public programmes retain credibility only when transparency becomes routine. Independent audits must be standard practice. Beneficiary disclosures must be clear. Financial trails must be traceable. Leadership must remain accountable beyond speeches and headlines.
If Ofosu Nkansah believes his stewardship met the highest public standards, transparency should strengthen his case, not threaten it. Full independent audits. Full beneficiary disclosure. Full financial traceability. Full cooperation with lawful investigative bodies. That is how confidence is rebuilt.
Because NEIP never belonged to one CEO. It belonged to the unemployed graduate seeking capital, the small business owner trying to grow, and the student hoping opportunity still reflects merit. When public leadership forgets that, scrutiny is not persecution. It is responsibility.
And Ghana cannot afford to normalise anything less.









