Secondary Cities At The Residential Housing Frontier: Examining The Determinants Of Private Renters’ Residential Satisfaction In Ghana.
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Habitat International
Abstract
Decades of political ambivalence, housing injustice, and a neoliberal housing sector aided by the government’s 
lax approach to housing provision have meant that, private rental housing remains the predominant sector for 
housing urban residents and their shifting geographies into secondary cities. Residential satisfaction in urban 
areas provides an important socio-spatial view of the housing sector in secondary cities and its implications for 
the inclusive and sustainable development of small and medium-sized cities. Yet, a large set of studies into the 
private rental housing sector has paid little attention to the influence of housing services (i.e. satisfaction with 
maintenance services, utility services and privacy) on residential satisfaction amongst private rental households. 
Using an ordinal logistic regression model and based on a sample size of 246 private rental households, this paper 
examined the influence of sociodemographic and housing services (i.e. satisfaction with maintenance services, 
utility services and privacy) variables on residential satisfaction amongst private rental households living in Cape 
Coast, Ghana. The chi-square test revealed a significant relationship between duration of stay (χ2 = 15.908, p =
0.003), satisfaction with maintenance service (χ2 = 98.477, p = 0.000), satisfaction with utility services (elec tricity and water) (χ2 = 45.934, p = 0.000), satisfaction with privacy (χ 2 = 41.252, p = 0.000) and residential 
satisfaction. Further, the logistic regression analysis also showed a significant negative relationship between 
maintenance services (β = − 3.928, p < 0.001), utility services (electricity and water) (β = − 1.033, p < 0.001), 
privacy (β = − 2.716, p < 0.01) and residential satisfaction. The findings call for the attention of both researchers 
and policymakers to recognize the inseparable relationship between housing and the broader built environment 
and to address challenges confronting the rental housing sector—considering that the quality of the residential 
environment is directly linked to the quality of life and the socio-physical well-being of residents.
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Research Article
Citation
Mensah, S. L., Okyere, S. A., Frimpong, L. K., Asiedu, A. B., Zaami, M., & Abunyewah, M. (2025). Secondary cities at the residential housing frontier: Examining the determinants of private renters’ residential satisfaction in Ghana. Habitat International, 155, 103234.
