All that Glitters is Not Gold: Polarization Amid Poverty Reduction in Ghana

42 Pages Posted: 21 Jul 2016 Last revised: 20 Jul 2017

See all articles by Fabio Clementi

Fabio Clementi

Università degli studi di Macerata

Vasco Molini

World Bank

Francesco Schettino

Second University of Naples

Date Written: July 20, 2016

Abstract

Ghana is an exceptional case in the Sub-Saharan Africa landscape. Together with a handful of other countries, Ghana offers the opportunity to analyze the distributional changes in the past two decades, since four comparable household surveys are available. In addition, different from many other countries in the continent, Ghana's rapid growth translated into fast poverty reduction. A closer look at the distributional changes that occurred in the same period, however, suggests less optimism. The present paper develops an innovative methodology to analyze the distributional changes that occurred and their drivers, with a high degree of accuracy and granularity. Looking at the results from 1991 to 2012, the paper documents how the distributional changes hollowed out the middle of the Ghanaian household consumption distribution and increased the concentration of households around the highest and lowest deciles; there was a clear surge in polarization indeed. When looking at the drivers of polarization, household characteristics, educational attainment, and access to basic infrastructure all tended to increase over time the size of the upper and lower tails of the consumption distribution and, as a consequence, the degree of polarization.

Suggested Citation

Clementi, Fabio and Molini, Vasco and Schettino, Francesco, All that Glitters is Not Gold: Polarization Amid Poverty Reduction in Ghana (July 20, 2016). World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 7758, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2812385

Fabio Clementi (Contact Author)

Università degli studi di Macerata ( email )

Piazza Strambi 1
62100 Macerata
Italy
+39 0733 258 2560 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://docenti.unimc.it/fabio.clementi?set_language=en&cl=en

Vasco Molini

World Bank ( email )

1818 H Street, NW
Washington, DC 20433
United States

Francesco Schettino

Second University of Naples ( email )

Via Antonio Vivaldi, 43
Caserta CE, Caserta 81100
Italy

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