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Female labour force participation: evidence from Ghana

Abena Yeboah Abraham (Department of Liberal Studies, Koforidua Polytechnic, Koforidua, Ghana)
Fidelia Nana Akom Ohemeng (Department of Sociology, University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana)
Williams Ohemeng (GIMPA Business School, Accra, Ghana)

International Journal of Social Economics

ISSN: 0306-8293

Article publication date: 6 November 2017

1582

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine female labour force participation (FLFP) and their employment choice between the formal and informal sectors after several institutional and social reforms such as Millennium Development Goal 3 aimed at promoting gender equality and empowerment of women by 2015, using data from Ghana’s 2010 Population and Housing Census.

Design/methodology/approach

In this paper, logit regression and multinomial logit techniques were employed.

Findings

The results show that FLFP has declined marginally from the 2005 figures; education remains the important factor in determining women’s participation in the formal sector. Strikingly 91 per cent of the FLFP is engaged in the informal sector of the Ghanaian economy, a sector with a very low contribution per head.

Practical implications

Interventions such as encouraging female education and retraining of self-employed females to improve upon their efficiency ought to be pursued vigorously; whiles developing rural areas for females to get equal labour opportunities and many others aimed at enhancing the efficiency and by inference earning per head of the informal sector is highly recommended.

Originality/value

The literature on the FLFP is thin in Ghana. The current study uses a census data unlike the previous studies and as such employed a huge sample size that reflects the reality in Ghana. The study contributed immensely to policy having established that 91 per cent of the female labour force is engaged in the informal sectors of the economy, and therefore any intervention targeting at reducing poverty and meeting the MDG 3 should be targeted at the informal sector of the Ghanaian economy.

Keywords

Citation

Abraham, A.Y., Ohemeng, F.N.A. and Ohemeng, W. (2017), "Female labour force participation: evidence from Ghana", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 44 No. 11, pp. 1489-1505. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSE-06-2015-0159

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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