Ethnicity and Wage Determination in Ghana

42 Pages Posted: 20 Apr 2016

See all articles by Abigail Barr

Abigail Barr

University of Nottingham

Abena Oduro

Centre for Policy Analysis (CEPA)

Date Written: December 2000

Abstract

In Ghana's manufacturing sector, workers tend to be employed by members of their own ethnic group, and different ethnic groups run very different types of enterprises. Employers favor their relatives in pay and in job allocation, possibly because they are more productive. There is no evidence of pay discrimination between ethnic groups. Barr and Oduro look at earnings differentials between members of different ethnic groups and between employers' relatives, unrelated members of the same ethnic group, and other workers in Ghana's manufacturing sector. They find that a significant proportion of the earnings differentials identified between ethnic groups can be explained with reference to a fairly standard set of observations about workers' characteristics. Labor market segregation along ethnic lines - combined with considerable variation in employers' characteristics (especially educational attainment and family background, possibly because of discrimination in other markets) - accounts for most of the remaining differentials.

Northerners earn considerably less than other groups mainly because they are less educated. The Other Akan earn much more than the relatively low-earning Asante, Fante, and Ewe. There is no evidence of discrimination between ethnic groups, although there is evidence of discrimination in favor of inexperienced workers from the same ethnic group, who can be assessed and matched with jobs more easily than similar workers from other ethnic groups.

Finally, workers who are related to their employers earn a considerable premium, possibly because they contribute more to productivity than their fellow workers (perhaps through an effect on esprit de corps). The authors' results draw attention to some startling differences in educational and labor market attainment between groups. A strong case can be made for including such issues in the policy debate.

This paper - a product of Macroeconomics and Growth, Development Research Group - is part of a larger effort in the group to understand the role of ethnicity in labor market outcomes and entrepreneurial success in Africa. The study was funded by the Bank's Research Support Budget under the research project "The Economics of Ethnicity and Entrepreneurship in Africa."

Suggested Citation

Barr, Abigail Margaret and Oduro, Abena, Ethnicity and Wage Determination in Ghana (December 2000). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=632576

Abigail Margaret Barr (Contact Author)

University of Nottingham ( email )

University Park
Nottingham, NG7 2RD
United Kingdom

Abena Oduro

Centre for Policy Analysis (CEPA) ( email )

P. O. Box 19010
No.11 Dr. Amilcar Cabral Road
Accra-North
Ghana
(233-21)779364 (Phone)
(233-21)773670 (Fax)