Ghanaian women have less financial decision-making power – Afrobarometer survey
Ghanaian women are twice as
likely as men to defer to their spouses in decisions about household finances,
according to a recent Afrobarometer survey.
The survey also finds persistent gender gaps in
education and ownership of key assets.
Apart from voting in general elections, women
are less interested in politics and less likely than men to participate in
political and civic activities.
The survey also shows a widening digital gap
between men and women despite an increase in women’s regular use of the
Internet.
The Ghanaian government has expressed its full
commitment to all the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),
including Goal 5, which calls for ensuring women’s full and effective
participation and equal opportunities for leadership at all levels of
decision-making in political, economic, and public life.
The president was named African Union Gender
Champion for his efforts in promoting gender equality. But Ghana ranks among
the bottom third of countries (133rd out of 189) in gender equality in the
United Nations Development Programme’s 2019 Gender Inequality Index.
Key findings ? Men are 10 percentage points more
likely than women to say they make decisions themselves about how household
money is spent (71% vs. 61%), while women are more than twice as likely as men
to defer that decision-making power to their spouses (13% vs. 5%).
? Women trail men in the ownership of a range of
key assets, including a bank account (19-percentage-point difference), motor
vehicle (17 points), computer (12 points), and mobile phone (9 points). ? Men
are twice as likely as women to have post-secondary education, whereas women
are twice as likely as men to lack formal education.
? Women and men are equally likely to say they
voted in the 2016 elections. But women lag behind men in other forms of
political and civic engagement, including an 11-percentage-point gap in
attendance of community meetings (44% vs. 55%).
? Since 2005, women have consistently expressed
less interest than men in politics, trailing by 11 percentage points in 2019.
? Since 2008, the digital gap between men and
women has consistently widened (from 5 to 17 percentage points), even though
women’s regular use of the Internet has increased.
Afrobarometer surveys
Afrobarometer is a pan-African, nonpartisan
survey research network that provides reliable data on Africans’ experiences
and evaluations of quality of life, governance, and democracy. Seven rounds of
surveys were completed in up to 38 countries between 1999 and 2018. Round 8
surveys in 2019/2020 are planned in at least 35 countries. Afrobarometer
conducts face-to-face interviews in the language of the respondent’s choice
with nationally representative samples.
The Afrobarometer team in Ghana, led by the
Ghana Center for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), interviewed 2,400 adult
Ghanaians between 16 September and 3 October 2019. A sample of this size yields
country-level results with a margin of error of +/-2 percentage points at a 95%
confidence level. Previous surveys were conducted in Ghana in 1999, 2002, 2004,
2008, 2012, 2014, and 2017.