Does Non-farm Income Improve or Worsen Income Inequality? Evidence from Rural Ghana

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Print Services, Rhodes University

Abstract

This paper uses nationally representative household survey data of 2006 to examine the effect of non-farm income on income inequality in rural Ghana. Employing the Gini-decomposition technique, results indicate that aggregate non-farm income increased income inequality among rural households in Ghana. In terms of its components, while non-farm self-employment income reduced income inequality, non-farm wage income increased income inequality. A factor-decomposition of inequality revealed that education is the single most important variable contributing to the inequality-increasing nature of non-farm income. The effect of education on inequality is more pronounced for non-farm wage income. The policy implication is for a narrowing of education inequality among rural households in Ghana to create greater access to non-farm employment to reduce rural income inequality and poverty.

Description

Keywords

Citation

African Review of Economics and Finance, Vol. 2, No. 2 (June)

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By