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PRWP

Reproducibility package for Household Business Performance in Ghana: The Role of Personality Traits and Gender Role Attitudes

2024
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Reference ID
RR_GHA_2024_148
DOI
https://doi.org/10.60572/em3c-v395
Author(s)
Akuffo Amankwah, Nkechi S. Owoo, Pauline Castaing, Amparo Palacios-Lopez
Collections
World Bank Policy Research Working Papers
Metadata
JSON
Created on
Jun 12, 2024
Last modified
Jun 13, 2024
  • Project Description
  • Downloads
  • Overview
  • Reproducibility Package
  • Description
  • Scope and coverage
  • Disclaimer
  • Access and rights
  • Contacts
  • Information on metadata
  • Citation
  • Overview

    Abstract

    The informal sector contributes significantly to total output and employment of low-income countries. While women-owned businesses feature strongly in these informal environments, they are generally characterized by low productivity. This paper explores how household business performance may be influenced by owners’ personality traits and their attitudes towards gender roles. Using multi-topic household survey data collected in two regions of Ghana, the results show that among female business owners, being organized is an important determinant of business success, while among male business owners, power motivation and tenacity are important factors. However, increasing traditionalism tends to dampen the effects of these personality traits for both genders. Other factors positively correlated with women-owned business performance include business registration, separating expenses for home and business purposes, ownership of business bank account, use of social media, as well as urban location of the business. For men-owned businesses, the results show that those located in traditional markets, have bank accounts, and use literate employees in operation tend to perform better. The findings imply that policies that aim to boost women-owned business performance need to consider the main barriers, especially attitudes towards gender roles, that may determine how businesses operate in these settings. The results also suggests the importance of soft-skills to boost business performance among men- and women-owned businesses.

    Reproducibility Package

    Scripts
    Readme Get Reproducibility Package
    Link: https://reproducibility.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/154/download/421/README.pdf
    Reproducibility package (data and code) for Household Business Performance in Ghana: The Role of Personality Traits and Gender Role Attitudes
    Title
    Reproducibility package (data and code) for Household Business Performance in Ghana: The Role of Personality Traits and Gender Role Attitudes
    Date
    2024-06
    Dependencies
    All dependencies are stored in the ado folder.
    Instructions
    See README in the reproducibility package.
    Notes
    Computational reproducibility verified by Development Impact (DIME) Analytics team, World Bank
    Source code repository
    Repository name URI
    Reproducible Research Repository (World Bank) https://reproducibility.worldbank.org
    Software
    Stata
    Name
    Stata
    Version
    17

    Reproducibility

    Technology environment

    Paper exhibits were reproduced on a computer with the following specifications:
    • OS: Windows 10 Enterprise, version 21H2
    • Processor: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E7-4890 v2 @ 2.80GHz 2.80 GHz
    • Memory available: 5.9 GB
    • Software version: Stata 17

    Technology requirements

    ~5 minutes runtime

    Reproduction instructions

    To successfully replicate this package, new users must change the file paths and run the Main do file "Dofile/0_Globals.do".

    Data

    Datasets
    The Ghana Informal Sector Measurement Study Data
    Name
    The Ghana Informal Sector Measurement Study Data
    Note
    Source: World Bank. Located at: data, files included sec_cover.dta, sec1_roster.dta, sec2_education.dta, sec3_labor.dta, sec7_gender.dta, sec8_personality.dta, sec9_assets.dta, sec6_nfe.dta. For more details on the contents of the files please see the README file.
    Access policy
    Published with the package
    Data URL
    Forthcoming at https://microdata.worldbank.org/
    Data statement

    All data used in this study are included in the package. See the README file for more details. A fully documented version of the dataset will soon be available in the World Bank Microdata Library. For questions regarding the data release, please get in touch with the author, Akuffo Amankwah, at aamankwah@worldbank.org

    Description

    Output
    Household Business Performance in Ghana: The Role of Personality Traits and Gender Role Attitudes
    Type
    Working Paper
    Title
    Household Business Performance in Ghana: The Role of Personality Traits and Gender Role Attitudes
    Authors
    Nkechi S. Owoo, Akuffo Amankwah, Pauline Castaing, Amparo Palacios-Lopez
    Description
    Policy Research Working Paper (PRWP) 10804
    URL
    http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099427506132435246/IDU10d6f93641c489147d81ae69181bd4a812b04
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10804
    Authors
    Author Affiliation Email
    Akuffo Amankwah World Bank aamankwah@worldbank.org
    Nkechi S. Owoo University of Ghana nowoo@ug.edu.gh
    Pauline Castaing World Bank pcastaing@worldbank.org
    Amparo Palacios-Lopez World Bank apalacioslopez@worldbank.org
    Date of production

    2024-06

    Scope and coverage

    Geographic locations
    Location Code
    Ghana GHA
    Keywords
    business performance informal businesses gender norms personality traits Ghana

    Disclaimer

    Disclaimer

    The materials in the reproducibility packages are distributed as they were prepared by the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this event do not necessarily reflect the views of the World Bank, the Executive Directors of the World Bank, or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the materials included in the reproducibility package.

    Access and rights

    License
    Name URI
    Modified BSD3 https://opensource.org/license/bsd-3-clause/

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email
    Akuffo Amankwah World Bank aamankwah@worldbank.org
    Reproducibility WBG World Bank reproducibility@worldbank.org

    Information on metadata

    Producers
    Name Abbreviation Affiliation Role
    Reproducibility WBG DIME World Bank - Development Impact Department Verification and preparation of metadata
    Date of Production

    2024-06-11

    Document version

    1

    Citation

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