Strangers in a strange land: Mapping household and neighbourhood associations with improved wellbeing outcomes in Accra, Ghana
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cities
Abstract
Urban poverty is not limited to informal settlements, rather it extends throughout cities, with the poor and
affluent often living in close proximity. Using a novel dataset derived from the full Ghanaian Census, we
investigate how neighbourhood versus household socio-economic status (SES) relates to a set of household
development outcomes (related to housing quality, energy, water and sanitation, and information technology) in
Accra, Ghana. We then assess “stranger” households' outcomes within neighbourhoods: do poor households fare
better in affluent neighbourhoods, and are affluent households negatively impacted by being in poor neigh bourhoods? Through a simple generalized linear model we estimate the variance components associated with
household and neighbourhood status for our outcome measures. Household SES is more closely associated with
13 of the 16 outcomes assessed compared to the neighbourhood average SES. For 9 outcomes poor households in
affluent areas fair better, and the affluent in poor areas are worse off. For two outcomes, poor households have
worse outcomes in affluent areas, and the affluent have better outcomes in poor areas, on average. For three
outcomes “stranger” households do worse in strange neighbourhoods. We discuss implications for mixed
development and how to direct resources through households versus location-based targets.
Description
Research Article
