african lions author workshop 2015: ghana

20
Understanding Ghana’s Success Growth Story and Job Creation Concerns Ernest Aryeetey , Vice Chancellor, University of Ghana and William Baah-Boateng, Department of Economics, University of Ghana African Lions Authors Draft Workshop, June 5, 2015, Arusha, Tanzania

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Page 1: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Understanding Ghana’s Success Growth

Story and Job Creation ConcernsErnest Aryeetey , Vice Chancellor, University of Ghana and

William Baah-Boateng, Department of Economics, University of Ghana

African Lions Authors Draft Workshop, June 5, 2015, Arusha, Tanzania

Page 2: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Outline

• Introduction – Growth story

• Employment: quantity and quality

• Poverty and inequality

• Growth-employment-poverty linkage

• Constraints to growth

• Skills gap

• Review of employment related policies

• Conclusion

Page 3: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Introduction – Growth Story

• Strong growth in Ghana above SSA since 2007

– Rebase of national accounts in 2006

• Pushed the country to Middle income status

– Oil production since Dec. 2010

-5.0

0.0

5.0

10.0

15.0

20.0

0.00

500.00

1000.00

1500.00

2000.00

19

91

19

94

19

97

20

00

20

03

20

06

20

09

20

12

GD

P G

row

th R

ate

s (%

)

Pe

r ca

pit

a G

DP

(U

S$)

Ghana GDP Per capita (US$)Ghana GDP growth rate (%)

Page 4: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Introduction – Growth Story

• Export due to oil was a demand major driver over the last three years but continue to be neutralized by increasing imports

• Public consumption reached new height in 2012 due to election related spending

• Gross capital formation peaked in 2012 due to oil exploration but slowed down in 2013 on account of decrease in exploration activity

Page 5: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

High level of employment than SSA

average dominated by low quality jobs

72.9 73.966.9

67.767.4

75.464.3 64.1 64.1

64.965.2

65.5

5.777.2 7.43

9.1410.24

12.03

0

5

10

15

0

20

40

60

80

1992 1999 2000 2006 2010 2013

Emp

loym

en

t Le

vels

(in

m

illio

ns)

Emp

loym

en

t-to

-p

op

ula

tio

n r

atio

(%

)

Ghana SSA Employment levels (Ghana)

Page 6: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Quantity and Quality of employment

Page 7: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Quantity and Quality of employment

Page 8: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Quantity and Quality of employment

• Higher working poverty rate in vulnerable/low quality jobs than productive and/or paid jobs

Page 9: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Poverty and inequality

• A consistent decline in poverty since 1989

• But increasing inequality

Page 10: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Growth-employment-poverty linkage

• Higher levels of employment than SSA though

• Employment lags behind growth and the gap seems widening

– with declining employment elasticity of output

Page 11: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Growth-employment-poverty linkage

• Slowing employment response to growth confirmed by declining elasticity

0.65

0.56 0.55

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

1991-2000 2000-2010 2011-2013

Employment Elasticity of growth

GDP

employmentey

ln_

ln_

Page 12: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Growth-employment-poverty linkage

• Higher growth in low labour absorption sectors (mining, oil, construction, finance) relative to high employment oriented sectors (agriculture, manufacturing)

• While employment in agriculture & manufacturing declining/stagnating but high growth in mining/oil is not generating enough jobs

Page 13: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Constraints to growth and employment

generation• 12.31 million constitutes

Ghana’s LF; and

• Has grown 3.4% since 1992 relative to 5.3% economic growth

• Higher LFPR for

– males than females

– Adults than youth

Page 14: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Constraints to growth and employment

generation• Size of LF not much of a challenge but

the quality

• 3 of every 4 have up to basic education hence (high informality)

• Slow growth of high skilled LF

• Quality constraint evident in low (0.15) contribution of education per worker to growth

• Could have adverse productivity effect

44.1 40.148.7

34.5 32.1 26.6

48.249.1 34.7

53.148.0 55.8

5.7 7.911.0

8.213.0 12.1

2.0 2.95.7 4.2 7.0 5.4

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1992 1999 2000 2006 2010 2013

Level of education of the labour force

None Basic or less Sec/Voc/Tech/Comm Post sec & Tertiary

Page 15: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Skills Gap as Constraint to Growth

• Low level of education culminates into shortage of high, vocational & semi-skilled

• High and semi-skilled jobs to be filled by low skill implied lower productivity (e.g. 40% of Professionals; 72% of technicians & 78% of legislators etc. underqualified in 2013 (See Sparreboom& Gomis, 2015)

• Specific skills gap also exist due to mismatch (Baah-Boateng and Baffour-Awua (2015)

Page 16: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Skills Gap as Constraint to Growth

40.4 36.1 35.4 34.8

59.6 63.9 64.6 65.2

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Year1 Year2 Year3 Year4

Distribution of University enrolment by Science and Humanities programmes 2012/13

Science Humanities

33.1 30.6 28.7

66.9 69.4 71.3

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Year1 Year2 Year3

Distribution of Polytechnic enrolment by Science and Humanities programmes 2012/13

Science Humanities

Page 17: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Review of Employment Oriented Policies

and Programmes • Job creation prior to 1983 was dictated by state-led economic strategy in a controlled economic

environment with public sector major employer

• A shift to private sector-led strategy in a liberalised after 1983 caused public sector jobs to decline in favour of private sector particularly informal employment

• Key Specific interventions towards employment generation & poverty reduction

– PAMSCAD

– STEP Program

– NYEP/GYEEDA

– Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP)

– National Employment Policy 2015

Page 18: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Further work to be done

• Trend in depth of poverty

• Employment elasticity by sector

• Labour productivity overall and by sector

• Returns to education and minimum wage issues

• Strengthen demographic section to capture demographic dividend or otherwise

Page 19: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

Conclusion

• Job creation is often treated as a residual outcome of macroeconomic strategies but not the main focus.

• Employment growth lags behind growth (with declining employment elasticity) and mostly occur in the informal service sector

• Growth mainly driven by high capital intensive sectors with jobs in agriculture & manufacturing stagnating at best

• Low quality of education drives informal sector employment associated with low earnings – pushing inequality

• Job creation needs to be more integrated into all national programs

Page 20: African Lions Author Workshop 2015: Ghana

www.wider.unu.eduHelsinki, Finland