Interregional Migration of Labor in Ghana, West Africa: Determinants, Consequences and Policy Intervention

Author:

Arthur John A.

Abstract

This article examines the determinants, consequences and policy intervention measures of the movement of labor within Ghana's administrative regions. The study concludes that the economic inequalities brought about by the uneven distribution of development projects in favor of urban areas causes depressed rural economic conditions, thus spurring rural to urban migration. Migration to the urban places of Ghana is therefore caused by individuals and families seeking better economic opportunities to improve the quality of their lives. Secondary determinants are varied, ranging from family obligations to the quest for adventure. The benefits of migration for the rural areas lie mainly in returned migrants’ contributions to the economic development of those areas. Migrants also contribute to the urban areas’ economic development, but their presence in large numbers has caused problems in the housing and in the delivery of social services. Rural development policies and land settlement schemes have been unsuccessful, due mainly to the lack of a comprehensive national development effort.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Cultural Studies

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4. Kunirum Osia, Black Africa and the dilemma of development,Journal of African Studies, 14 (1987), pp. 37–45.

5. John Allen,The Growth of Ghana’s Cities (Legon, Ghana: University of Ghana Press, 1979).

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