Tension has gripped Makerere University following the release of government-sponsored admission lists, with students and parents questioning how candidates with near-perfect academic records failed to secure placement. What initially appeared to many as a possible system error has instead revealed deeper structural pressures within Uganda’s higher education admissions system.According to Prof. Mukadasi Buyinza Academic Registrar of Makerere University, the process was accurate and merit-based, with no technical faults. “We are 100 percent accurate… the issue is not an error; the cut-off points are very high,” he explained, attributing the outcome to intensified competition rather than administrative failure. ‘’Indeed, cut-off points for highly competitive programmes such as Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery rose to approximately 54.1 points for female applicants and 54.4 for males, reflecting the near-perfect academic performance now required for admission’’ He addedThis development highlights a critical shift in the functioning of merit within Uganda’s university admission system. While the process remains technically fair, it is increasingly constrained by system pressure. The 2025 Uganda Advanced Certificate of Education (UACE) results produced an unusually high number of candidates scoring 20 points, creating what can be described as a “20-point paradox.” With many applicants clustered at the highest level of performance, universities are forced to rely on finer distinctions, particularly O-Level aggregates and cumulative academic records, to differentiate among equally qualified candidates.As Prof Buyinza noted, even among those with triple A grades and those with 20 points, between 50 and 60 candidates were not admitted, often due to weaker O-Level results. This underscores a key reality: academic excellence is no longer judged solely on final examinations, but on consistent performance across the entire educational journey.At a structural level, the admission crisis reflects a mismatch between growing demand and limited capacity. Uganda offers approximately 4,000 government-sponsored university slots annually, with Makerere accounting for about 1,672 of these. However, the number of high-performing candidates continues to rise due to improved academic outcomes and increased participation in science subjects. With admissions conducted jointly across all public universities, selecting from among the top 10,000 candidates, the competition has become exceptionally tight. This raises a fundamental policy question: whether the higher education system is expanding at a pace that matches the growing pool of qualified applicants.Beyond structural constraints, the situation also reveals gaps in how students navigate the admission process. Many applicants continue to rely heavily on A-Level points as the primary determinant of success, often overlooking the significance of O-Level performance and programme-specific weighting.Additionally, poor course selection strategies, such as overconcentration on highly competitive programmes, misalignment with subject strengths, and lack of alternative choices, have contributed to the exclusion of otherwise qualified candidates. As highlighted by Prof. Buyinza, some students pursue courses that do not reflect their strongest academic areas, further reducing their chances in an already competitive environment.The growing complaints from students alleging errors in the admission process point to a broader disconnect between perception and reality. While the university maintains that the system is accurate and transparent, the frustration among applicants suggests a knowledge gap regarding how admissions decisions are made. This gap, if not addressed, risks eroding trust in the system and increasing dissatisfaction among stakeholders.Ultimately, the current admission cycle signals a turning point for Uganda’s higher education sector. The rising cut-off points are not merely a reflection of improved performance but an indication of systemic strain. Without deliberate policy interventions, such as expanding government sponsorship, enhancing transparency in admission criteria, and strengthening student guidance mechanisms, the system risks becoming increasingly exclusionary.For future applicants, the implication is clear: academic excellence alone is no longer sufficient; success will depend equally on strategic decision-making and a comprehensive understanding of the admission process. For policymakers, the challenge lies in ensuring that a system designed to reward merit does not, under mounting pressure, inadvertently limit access to opportunity.The post Government Sponsorship under Strain as Rising Cut-Off Points Lock Out Top Students was written by the awesome team at Campus Bee.