TY - JOUR
T1 - Special Economic Zones (SEZ) Wage Premium Hypothesis
T2 - An Unconditional Quantile Regression and Decomposition Approach
AU - Owusu, Nana Yaw Agyeman
AU - Osei, Robert Darko
AU - Ackah, Charles Godfred
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s).
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This study examines the determinants of wages within special economic zones (SEZs) and the broader workforce. It explores how SEZ employment, unionisation, education and gender affect wage levels and compares wage differentials between SEZ and non-SEZ employees. Using ordinary least squares, unconditional quantile regression and decomposition techniques, the study analyses firm–employee dataset of 1,240 employees in 2022. The findings show SEZ employment and unionisation significantly increase wages, with SEZ workers enjoying a wage premium. Education consistently boosts wages across percentiles, while gender disparities are more pronounced at higher-wage levels, with a wage gap of up to 21.10% against females. Decomposition reveals that 16.9% of the SEZ and non-SEZ wage gap is explained by observable factors like skills, while the remainder points to institutional or cultural biases. The study highlights SEZs’ role in wage structures and emphasises the need for policies promoting wage equity, educational opportunities and gender equality in the labour market.
AB - This study examines the determinants of wages within special economic zones (SEZs) and the broader workforce. It explores how SEZ employment, unionisation, education and gender affect wage levels and compares wage differentials between SEZ and non-SEZ employees. Using ordinary least squares, unconditional quantile regression and decomposition techniques, the study analyses firm–employee dataset of 1,240 employees in 2022. The findings show SEZ employment and unionisation significantly increase wages, with SEZ workers enjoying a wage premium. Education consistently boosts wages across percentiles, while gender disparities are more pronounced at higher-wage levels, with a wage gap of up to 21.10% against females. Decomposition reveals that 16.9% of the SEZ and non-SEZ wage gap is explained by observable factors like skills, while the remainder points to institutional or cultural biases. The study highlights SEZs’ role in wage structures and emphasises the need for policies promoting wage equity, educational opportunities and gender equality in the labour market.
KW - Ghana
KW - Special economic zones
KW - unconditional quantile techniques
KW - union
KW - wage
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85218151030
U2 - 10.1177/02601079251314229
DO - 10.1177/02601079251314229
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85218151030
SN - 0260-1079
JO - Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics
JF - Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics
ER -