I earned my professorship - Edward Dua Agyeman
I write in response to the publication of GTEC dated 17th June 2025, which demanded that I provide evidence confirming my appointment or promotion to the rank of professor. I must state that I have not been served a copy of the said letter. Like everyone else I read it on social media, hence my response via the same media.
To give a proper context to my response, permit me to expound on some given meanings of a “Professor”.
The Oxford Learner’s Dictionary defines a professor as a university teacher of the highest academic rank.
A professor, according to Webster’s Dictionary, is a faculty member holding the highest academic rank at a college or university, or more broadly, a teacher at a university, college, or sometimes a secondary school. It also refers to someone who teaches or professes special knowledge in a particular art, sport, or occupation requiring skill.
The title “Professor” is often conferred on individuals who have demonstrated significant expertise and achievement in their field. It is worth noting that contrary to popular belief, not all Professors are PhD holders. In fact, some Professors are first degree holders.
Professor does not denote an examinable academic qualification beyond a PhD but an academic staff grade conferred on a teacher or lecturer by appointment or promotion by a university or an educational institution of higher learning authorised by law to award same.
That said, I must mention that except in last twenty years that I have had the privilege to serve in the public service as the Auditor-General of Ghana and the chairman of the Ghana Audit Service Board, I have , for the most part of my life ,been in the academic field , teaching, conducting research and publishing.
I started my teaching profession at the Redbridge Technical College, Romford, in the United Kingdom in the 1970s. I started as Assistant Lecturer for a year and went to the Garnet College, University of London for teacher’s training and attained a certificate of education. I was then promoted to the rank of a Lecturer and then progressed to Senior Lecturer.
I went to teach at the City of London College, Moorgate, London, which was later named City of London Polytechnic, Moorgate, and now called City University of London which after its merger with St. George’s University of London.
As a senior lecturer I moved to Emile Woolf College of Accountancy in Holborn, London to teach taxation and financial accounting.
In 2004 I was appointed a lecturer in government accounting by the United Nations (UN) department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) and the International Organisation of Supreme Audit Institution (INTOSAI) in Vienna, Austria.
In the year 2014, I was appointed a professor of Tax and Accounting by Warnborough College, Canterbury, United Kingdom.
I hold BA (Hons) in Business Studies from Middlesex University, London (1973), a Certificate of Education from Garnet College, University of London (1975), Master of Public Administration (MPA) (2009) from the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA) and PhD in Taxation and Public Sector Audit from Warnborough College, Canterbury, United Kingdom (2013).
I am a Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (FCCA) (1982) and a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants, Ghana (FCA). I completed the ACCA examinations in 1977 in a record time of two years. The examinations were held two times in a year (that is two examination diets in a year) and I passed in every consecutive sitting.
I was appointed Examiner of Accounting by the London Chamber of Commerce and Industry from 1974 – 1976. I was the first Director of Education and Training of the Institute of Chartered Accountants (Ghana) from 1978 to 1981 where I initiated the evolution of the ICAG. I was the first Executive Director of the Liberian Institute of Certified Public Accountants from 1982 to 1984. I nurtured the Institute from its embryonic stage until it became a fully-fledged professional institute regulated by the laws of Liberia. I was appointed the first Director of Training for West African Region by Pannell Kerr Forster, an international firm of chartered accountants, from 1984 to 1987, to teach their trainees who were studying for the accountancy examinations and also conducted trainings for their senior staff and partners. I was in charge of their offices in West Africa (Lagos, Kano, Kaduna and Jos in Nigeria, Accra and Kumasi in Ghana, Lome in Togo, Monrovia in Liberia, and Freetown in Sierra Leone). I also held the position of Programme Coordinator, European Union Human Resource Development Programme, Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development, Ghana (1995 – 1997).
I was appointed the Senior Consultant and Director of Finance at the Regent University College of Science and Technology, Accra from September 2013 to May 2014. In 2018 I was appointed a Senior Research Fellow of the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA-Ghana), Accra.
I am a founding member of the African Organisation of English-speaking Supreme Audit Institutions (AFROSAI-E) whose Secretariat is in Pretoria, South Africa, and served two terms of three years each as the Vice Chairman of the Governing Board of the Organisation from 2004 – 2009. I also served as a chairman of the Regional Training Committee of AFROSAI-E (2004), and chairman of AFROSAI-E Ad-Hoc Committee on Regrouping of English-speaking Supreme Audit Institutions of Africa (2004).
I am most certainly not left out when it comes to international recognition. I was selected as the International Professional of the year 2005 and listed in the Dictionary of International Biography 2005/2006 Thirty-Second Edition, page 15, on the Worldwide Honours List by the International Biographical Centre, Cambridge, England.
I first published Pay-As- You-Earn (PAYE) Tax Deduction Tables in Ghana in 1994 to assist businesses to compute the income tax of employees. Industry and commerce benefitted from it before the electronic computers took over. I have also published many books on taxation, bookkeeping and accountancy. In 1980 I published the first taxation book, Principles of Ghana Taxation, and Capital Allowances both of which were the main textbooks for accountancy students in the tertiary institutions including the then University of Ghana School of Administration now the University of Ghana Business School.
I have professionally reviewed books and journals produced by eminent authors including Professor Kwame Boasiako Omane-Antwi as below.
I have made the following academic presentations worldwide:
I have participated in 32 other workshops, seminars and conferences throughout the world including the following:
Mexico City (5 – 10 November, 2007), Canada (19 August, 2007), United Kingdom (20th June, 2007), Cape Town, South Africa (17 – 19 May, 2006), Arusha, Tanzania (6 – 10 March, 2006), Tripoli, Libya (12 – 14 December, 2005), Johannesburg, South Africa (14 – 18 November, 2005), Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire (17 – 22 July, 2005), Wellington, New Zealand (30 January – 2 February, 2005), Budapest, Hungary (9 – 16 October, 2004), Swakopmund, Namibia (3 - 7 May, 2004), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (7 – 9 October, 2002), Seoul, Korea (15 – 19 October, 2001), Prague, Czech Republic (7 – 12 October, 2001), and Centre for Financial Engineering in Development and the Department of Economics of the American University, Washington, DC (6 – 17 December, 1993).
I was appointed the Auditor-General of the Republic of Ghana in April, 2001 till May 2010. During my tenure the office saw some significant developments and restructuring. The Ghana Audit Service turned from the ordinary civil service with low level educational qualifications to staff with higher academic and professional qualifications.
I made education and training my priority and motivated the staff to undertake professional courses, especially, in accountancy and other relevant disciplines. Today, the Ghana Audit Service has about 500 chartered accountants and close to 1,500 first degree and master’s degree holders in relevant disciplines. Also, the Service has 3 PhD holders and 10 PhD students. My professional legacy is today measured by the impact I made on the public sector audit in Ghana and the world generally.
The Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC) publications in the press on 18th June, 2025
I must register my dissatisfaction with the actions of GTEC which is nothing short of a failed attempt to tarnish my hard-earned image in the eyes of right-thinking members of this country and drag my good name in the mud. I choose to resort to the use of legal structures to vindicate my rights. My lawyers will take the necessary steps in due course.
Conclusion
As I have stated above, Professorship is not an examinable academic qualification. It is a position earned by scholars who have demonstrated significant expertise in their field, and I am certain that, by this write-up I have demonstrated to all who care to know that I earned my “Professorship” by dint of hard work.