Education inequality in Ghana: gender and spatial dimensions
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of the paper is to examine the nature and extent of gender and spatial inequalities in educational attainment in Ghana.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper uses the education Gini coefficient, computed on the basis of years of schooling of individuals, to assess education inequality in Ghana.
Findings
The paper finds evidence of gender and spatial inequality in education in Ghana. In particular, the three northern regions have lower education attainment as well as higher education Gini coefficients compared to the rest of the country. The paper finds evidence of intra‐gender and intra‐spatial inequalities in education attainment in Ghana, with females contributing proportionately more to the within‐inequality component of the education Gini. The paper also finds a positive correlation between poverty incidence and education inequality.
Research limitations/implications
The research finds a positive correlation between poverty incidence and education inequality but requires an econometric analysis to make inferences regarding causality.
Practical implications
The findings call for the design and implementation of policies not only to address between‐gender and spatial inequities in education in Ghana, but also to tackle within‐gender and within‐spatial inequalities. The positive correlation between poverty incidence and education inequality implies the need to create greater equity in educational opportunities across the country.
Social implications
The need for changes in attitudes, values and cultural practices that put girls at a disadvantage when it comes to education.
Originality/value
One important and new finding of the paper is the existence of intra‐gender and intra‐spatial inequalities in education attainment in Ghana, with females contributing proportionately more to the within‐inequality component of the education Gini.
Keywords
Citation
Senadza, B. (2012), "Education inequality in Ghana: gender and spatial dimensions", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 39 No. 6, pp. 724-739. https://doi.org/10.1108/01443581211274647
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited