A new World Bank report shows that poverty rates exceed 50 percent in Ghana’s Upper East, Upper West, and Northern Regions, highlighting entrenched inequalities that persist despite decades of NGO interventions and the country’s moderate GDP growth.
Ghana has often been hailed internationally for steady economic expansion, averaging between 4 and 5 percent in recent years. Yet behind the growth narrative lies a sobering reality.
The World Bank’s 2025 Policy Notes: Transforming Ghana in a Generation reveals that poverty levels in these three regions remain stubbornly above 50 percent, in stark contrast with the rest of the country.
Even more concerning, more than 80 percent of Ghana’s poverty incidence is concentrated in rural areas, where farming households rely almost entirely on rain-fed subsistence agriculture.
“Disparities in poverty and social outcomes are stark between the Upper East, Upper West, and Northern Regions, where absolute poverty rates remain above 50 percent, and the rest of the country. These spatial inequities reflect both income sources and disparities in service delivery,” the report indicated.
It added that, “More than 80 percent of Ghana’s poverty incidence is in rural areas.”
While the south benefits from expanding industries, improved infrastructure, stronger schools, and modern hospitals, many northern communities remain locked in deprivation. Farmers face rising crop failures as climate change worsens rainfall volatility, pushing households deeper into food insecurity and poverty.
The report noted, “There is also a substantial difference between poor and rich districts in access to infrastructure (for example, electricity, roads, water, and sanitation), education, and health.”
The persistence of poverty is especially striking given decades of NGO and donor projects in the north. From nutrition schemes to borehole drilling, countless programmes have attempted to close the gap. Yet the World Bank findings suggest these interventions have not been transformative in lifting residents out of poverty.
The report stressed that “agriculture remains the dominant employer in the three Northern Regions, with farmers mainly engaged in rain-fed traditional subsistence agriculture, which is disproportionately affected by volatile rainfall patterns and increasing crop failures due to climate change.”
The findings raise difficult questions about whether development efforts have been too fragmented to spark real convergence. For Ghana, the challenge now is to complement national growth with bold, targeted policies that address structural inequality, climate vulnerability, and uneven access to services, ensuring that no region is left behind.