Ghana Faces 26-Year Timeline to Reach Upper Middle-Income Status, Says ISSER Director

However, to achieve upper middle-income status, the country would need to reach $4,560, a process that at the current pace could take 26 years.

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Director of the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER), Professor Peter Quartey, speaking during a panel discussion at the launch of the World Bank’s 2024 World Development Report, highlighted the daunting challenge Ghana faces in breaking free from the middle-income trap.

According to Professor Quartey, Ghana became a middle-income country in 2010, with a capital base of $1,337. By 2023, this figure had grown to around $2,365. However, to achieve upper middle-income status, the country would need to reach $4,560, a process that at the current pace could take 26 years.

 

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During a panel discussion on the report, Professor Quartey emphasized that Ghana’s economic transformation requires targeted intervention, especially in supporting the middle sectors of the economy.

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He argued that beyond credit provisions, there must be a focus on processing, service sector development, and value accumulation, urging for coordinated efforts between the government and private sector to drive this change.

The World Development Report underscores a broader concern for the 108 middle-income countries (MICs) globally, many of which are struggling to escape the middle-income trap.

 

According to the report, these countries must transition through three critical stages to achieve high-income status. The first, referred to as “1i,” focuses on investment.

 

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The second, “2i,” adds the integration and dissemination of foreign technologies. Finally, the “3i” stage introduces innovation into the growth model.

South Korea is cited as a success story. With a per capita income of just $1,200 in 1960, the country embarked on a strategy of heavy investment and industrial policy in the 1970s, focused on adopting foreign technologies.

By the end of 2023, South Korea’s per capita income had surged to $33,000, illustrating the power of this phased approach.

For most middle-income countries, progress has been far less encouraging. While many have moved out of low-income status since the 1990s, only 34 out of 108 have transitioned to high-income economies over the past three decades.

The challenge for these nations lies not only in maintaining growth but also in accelerating it, requiring a delicate balance of investment, technology, and innovation to avoid becoming permanently stalled in the middle-income bracket.

Source:norvanreports.com

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