77 research outputs found
Household income inequality in Ghana: a decomposition analysis
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to decompose income inequality across various household income components and to estimate the marginal effects of changes in each of the income components on overall income inequality in Ghana.
Design/methodology/approach
Data were collected from the fifth and sixth rounds of the Ghana Living Standards Surveys. Gini coefficient was estimated and decomposed across structured income components. The marginal effects were obtained by computing the partial derivatives of the Gini coefficient with respect to a percentage change in a particular income source.
Findings
The results suggest that, in general, income inequality has increased marginally over the years (Gini coefficient of 0.66 in 2013 and 0.62 in 2006). Inequality was, however, higher in urban areas than in rural areas in 2013 with the reverse observed in 2006. The income component decomposition analysis suggests that wage employment income dominated household income in both rural and urban areas, even though the magnitude was higher in urban areas. Farm income was only dominant in rural communities in 2006. Self-employment and remittance income had consistent inequality reducing effects on total household income distribution.
Originality/value
The study goes beyond inequality studies in Ghana to estimate the marginal effect of income components on inequality. Such decomposition will allow for effective policy targeting in a resource-constrained developing country like Ghana.
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Estimating household vulnerability to poverty from cross section data: an empirical evidence from Ghana
Background
In many developing countries, policies aimed at improving welfare through poverty reduction tend to target the current poor to the neglect of the vulnerable. An understanding of household susceptibility to future poverty will be crucial for sustainable growth and development. The objective of the study is to assess ex-ante welfare through vulnerability to poverty estimates among households in Ghana and to examine the effect of various socioeconomic characteristics on vulnerability to poverty.
Method
The study uses cross section data from the fifth round of the Ghana Living Standards Survey (GLSS) with a nationally representative sample of 8,687 households from all administrative regions in Ghana. The study employs a three step Feasible Generalized Least Squares (FGLS) estimation procedure to estimate vulnerability to poverty and to model the effect of household socioeconomic status on expected future consumption and variations in future consumption.
Results
The results show that, about 56% of households in Ghana are vulnerable to poverty and this is significantly higher than observed poverty level of about 28%. While the Eastern region was found to have the highest average vulnerability of approximately 73%, the Upper West region had the least vulnerability with about 21% average vulnerability to poverty. Other regions with relatively high incidence of vulnerability to poverty include the Western region (70%) and the Volta region (69%). Vulnerability to poverty was estimated to be 61% among urban households and 25% among rural households. Moreover, household health status, household size and education attainments significantly influence vulnerability to poverty. Male headed households were found to be less vulnerable to future poverty.
Conclusion
The results suggest that poverty and vulnerability to poverty are independent concepts. This implies that policies directed towards poverty reduction need to take into account the vulnerability of current non-poor households. Also, various household characteristics should be considered in developing poverty reduction strategies
Amélioration des Données Socio-Économiques sur les Terres Rapport de Stratégie Ghana
Cette mission visait à évaluer la nature et la disponibilité des données socio économiques sur les terres au Ghana. Les objectifs spécifiques de l'étude étaient
les suivants : identifier les principales parties prenantes en matière de données
foncières et socio-économiques, évaluer la disponibilité des données et fournir des
suggestions pour améliorer les données foncières socio-économiques au Ghana.
L'approche adoptée pour préparer cette stratégie a été de mener d'abord une étude
documentaire pour identifier les types de données disponibles et leur accessibilité.
L'étude s'est également engagée auprès de diverses parties prenantes du secteur
foncier. Sept catégories clés de parties prenantes dans les données foncières socio économiques au Ghana ont été identifiées. En termes de disponibilité des données,
le service statistique du Ghana héberge en ligne la plupart des données socio économiques nationales du pays et offre un accès facile à la plupart de ces ensembles
de données. Cependant, certains ensembles de données n'ont pas été collectés par
le service statistique et ne sont donc pas disponibles publiquement. Les statistiques
sommaires présentées se concentrent principalement sur les terres agricoles et
montrent quelques variations intéressantes selon le sexe et la localisation du ménage.
Ce rapport stratégique recommande au gouvernement d'élargir les données socio économiques disponibles pour couvrir la propriété et l'utilisation des terres non
agricoles. En outre, il est nécessaire de créer un service d'assistance foncière où les
données socio-économiques foncières de toutes les parties prenantes peuvent être
gérées pour un accès facile. Cela sera utile pour les décisions politiques et les mises
en œuvre.
On the efficiency of public health expenditure in Sub-Saharan Africa: Does corruption and quality of public institutions matter?
Health expenditure in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) has improved over the years with several recent efforts to improve resource commitments to the health sector. Health outcomes in the region have, however, seen little improvements over the years. Several reasons, including the efficiency of health expenditure, have been given to justify this mismatch. Studies on health expenditure efficiency have mainly focused on developed regions with little attention to SSA. The objective of the study was, therefore, to examine The effects of corruption and public institution quality on efficiency. The efficiency of health expenditure was also compared across selected SSA countries. Data for the study was sourced from the World Bank's World Development Indicators for 45 countries covering the period 2005 to 2011. The two-stage Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) was employed for the analysis. The first stage computes efficiency scores while the second stage examines the determinants of efficiency using the Tobit model. Per capita health expenditure was used as input while infant, under-five mortality and crude death rates were used as outputs. The results show that health expenditure efficiency was low with average scores of approximately 0.5. This suggests that there exist significant potential for SSA countries to improve population health outcomes given the level of expenditure. There was significant variation across countries with Cape Verde, Eritrea and Mauritius among the efficient countries while Equatorial Guinea, Sierra Leone and Swaziland were relatively inefficient. High corruption and poor public sector institutions reduced health expenditure efficiency. The findings emphasize the fact that, while increased health spending is necessary, it is also important to ensure efficiency in resource use across SSA countries. This can be achieved by effective monitoring and evaluation programmes that ensure reduced corruption and improved public institutions
HIV/AIDS-related stigma and HIV test uptake in Ghana: evidence from the 2008 Demographic and Health Survey
The study examined the association between HIV test uptake and socioeconomic characteristics of individuals, including HIV-related stigma behaviours. The study also investigated the socioeconomic determinants of HIV-related stigma in Ghana. Cross tabulations and logistic regression techniques were applied to data from the 2008 Ghana Demographic and Health Survey. The results showed significantly low HIV test uptake and some level of HIV-related stigma prevalence in Ghana. Higher wealth status, educational attainment and HIV-related stigma were significant determinants of HIV test uptake. Aside wealth status and education, rural place of residence and religious affiliation were positive and significant determinants of HIV-related stigma. The findings call for comprehensive HIV education including treatment, prevention and care. Legislations to discourage stigma and improve HIV-testing will be critical policy steps in the right direction.
Efficiency of health systems in sub-Sahara Africa: a comparative analysis of time varying stochastic frontier models
The purpose of the current study was to estimate efficiency of health systems in sub-Sahara Africa (SSA) and to compare efficiency estimates from various time-varying frontier models. The study used data for 45 countries in SSA from 2005 to 2011 sourced from the Word Bank World Development Indicators. Parametric time-varying stochastic frontier models were used in the analysis. Infant survival rate was used as the outcome variable, while per-capita health expenditure was used as main controllable input. The results show some variations in efficiency estimates among the various models. Estimates from the ‘true’ random effect model were however preferable after controlling for unobserved heterogeneity which was captured in the inefficiency terms of the other frontier models. The results also suggest a wide variation in the efficiency of health systems in sub-Sahara Africa. On average health system efficiency was estimated to be approximately 0.80 which implies resource wastage of about 0.20. Cape Verde, Mauritius and Tanzania were estimated to be relatively efficient while Angola, Equatorial Guinea and Sierra Leone were among the least performers in terms of health system efficiency. The findings suggest that the omission of unobserved heterogeneity may lead to bias in estimated inefficiency. The ‘true’ random effect model was identified to address the problem of unobserved heterogeneity. The findings also suggest a generally poor performance of health systems in terms of efficiency in the use of resources. While resource commitment to the health sector is critical, it is important to also ensure the efficient use of these resources. Improving the performance of institutions in the health sector may go a long way in improving the general health status of the African populatio
Fiscal space for health in Sub-Saharan African countries: an efficiency approach
The study argues that potential savings from efficiency could be effective alternative to increasing health system financing in SSA. Health system efficiency estimates were derived from the Data Envelopment Analysis and Stochastic Frontier Analysis and used to compute potential gains from efficiency. Data was sourced from the World Bank's world development indicators for 45 SSA countries in 2011. The results reveal that average potential saving in health expenditure from improved efficiency was 0.10% and 0.75% of GDP per capita in the DEA and SFA models, respectively. The results also showed that a 1% increase in efficiency of health expenditure reduced infant mortality rate by 0.91% compared to 0.40% reduction in infant mortality if health expenditure increased by 1%. The results imply that in the face of significant economic challenges and burden on government budget, improving health expenditure efficiency to create some fiscal space will be an important step
Demand for abortion and post abortion care in Ibadan, Nigeria
Background: While induced abortion is considered to be illegal and socially unacceptable in Nigeria, it is still practiced by many women in the country. Poor family planning and unsafe abortion practices have daunting effects on maternal health. For instance, Nigeria is on the verge of not meeting the Millennium development goals on maternal health due to high maternal mortality ratio, estimated to be about 630 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. Recent evidences have shown that a major factor in this trend is the high incidence of abortion in the country. The objective of this paper is, therefore, to investigate the factors determining the demand for abortion and post-abortion care in Ibadan city of Nigeria. Methods: The study employed data from a hospital-based/exploratory survey carried out between March to September 2010. Closed ended questionnaires were administered to a sample of 384 women of reproductive age from three hospitals within the Ibadan metropolis in South West Nigeria. However, only 308 valid responses were received and analysed. A probit model was fitted to determine the socioeconomic factors that influence demand for abortion and post-abortion care. Results: The results showed that 62% of respondents demanded for abortion while 52.3% of those that demanded for abortion received post-abortion care. The findings again showed that income was a significant determinant of abortion and post-abortion care demand. Women with higher income were more likely to demand abortion and post-abortion care. Married women were found to be less likely to demand for abortion and post-abortion care. Older women were significantly less likely to demand for abortion and post-abortion care. Mothers' education was only statistically significant in determining abortion demand but not post-abortion care demand. Conclusion: The findings suggest that while abortion is illegal in Nigeria, some women in the Ibadan city do abort unwanted pregnancies. The consequence of this in the absence of proper post-abortion care is daunting. There is the need for policymakers to intensify public education against indiscriminate abortion and to reduce unwanted pregnancies. In effect, there is need for effective alternative family planning methods. This is likely to reduce the demand for abortion. Further, with income found as a major constraint, post abortion services should be made accessible to both the rich and poor alike so as to prevent unnecessary maternal deaths as a result of abortion related complications
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