By Adnan Adams Mohammed
A burgeoning financial crisis is gripping Ghana’s workforce, as a new study reveals that a staggering 68% of salaried employees are living month-to-month with zero savings.
The data paints a grim picture of a labor market characterized by “starvation wages” and deep-seated structural flaws that threaten the nation’s long-term economic stability.
The study, which surveyed thousands of formal sector workers across the country, found that only 32% of respondents manage to set aside any portion of their income after meeting basic needs like rent, food, and transportation. For the vast majority, the rising cost of living has effectively decoupled wages from the reality of survival.
“The situation is dire. We are seeing a generation of formal workers who are one medical emergency or one missed paycheck away from total destitution,” said Dr. Kwesi Atuahene, a lead researcher involved in the study. “When over two-thirds of your salaried workforce cannot save, you aren’t just looking at a poverty problem; you’re looking at a total collapse of the middle class’s ability to invest in the future.”
The findings highlight a widening gap between inflation and salary increments. The Consumer Price Index saw volatile spikes during the 24 months prior to the survey’s report being written, but private and public sector wages remained largely stagnant or failed to keep pace with the depreciating Cedi at the time
Structural decay and the “job first” solution
Experts argue that the inability to save is merely a symptom of a much larger malady: deep structural weaknesses within Ghana’s labor market. From a lack of high-value manufacturing jobs to an over-reliance on the informal sector, the current economic architecture is failing to provide sustainable livelihoods.
Commenting on these systemic issues, Dr. Saied Tachie-Menson, a U.S.-based Ghanaian economist, noted that the country’s labor market is currently “fragile” and requires an urgent overhaul.
“Ghana’s labor market faces deep structural weaknesses that cannot be fixed by temporary subsidies or minor tax tweaks,” Dr. Tachie-Menson stated. “We have a mismatch between the skills produced by our educational institutions and the actual needs of a modern economy. This leads to underemployment, where even those with degrees are stuck in low-paying roles that offer no room for financial growth.”
Dr. Tachie-Menson pointed to the National Development Planning Commission’s (NDPC) “Job-First” agenda as a necessary intervention. The policy aims to prioritize employment creation as the primary metric of economic success, rather than focusing solely on GDP growth.
“The NDPC’s Job-First agenda is laudable because it shifts the focus back to the human element of economics,” Tachie-Menson added. “If we do not create high-productivity jobs that pay a living wage, rather than just a survival wage, the cycle of zero savings will continue to haunt the Ghanaian worker.”
Voices from the ground
For the workers themselves, the statistics are more than just number they represent a daily struggle for dignity.
“I have worked as an accountant for six years,” said Michael Mensah, a resident of Accra. “After paying for my room and my commute, there is literally nothing left. I haven’t put a single Cedi into a savings account since 2022. How can I think about marriage or buying a house?”
Similar sentiments are echoed across various sectors. Education and healthcare workers, often considered the backbone of the public sector, report that their salaries are “eroded” before they even hit their bank accounts due to high debt servicing and the cost of basic utilities.
The path forward
The study concludes with a call for a tripartite dialogue between the government, organized labor, and the private sector to redefine the national minimum wage and address the “cost of living allowance” (COLA) more aggressively.
Without a significant shift in wage policy and the successful implementation of the NDPC’s structural reforms, experts warn that Ghana may face a “brain drain” of its most skilled salaried workers seeking better prospects abroad leaving the domestic labor market even more depleted.
As one labor union leader put it: “A worker who cannot save is a worker without hope. And a nation of hopeless workers cannot build a prosperous future.”
