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Abstract
This paper investigates empirically the factors that influence real agricultural
wage rates in Ghana, based on 1957 to 1991 data. The Johansen cointegration
framework is used to examine long-run relationships among agricultural and
urban wage rates, the domestic terms of trade between agriculture and nonagriculture,
urban unemployment, capital stock in agriculture and the size of the
rural population. An error correction model is then used to investigate short-run
dynamic relationships among the variables. The results show that: (1) there is
only one stable equilibrium relationship among agricultural wage rates and their
determinants in the long-run; (2) a 1 percent change in the domestic terms of
trade between agriculture and non-agriculture leads to a 0.48 percent change in
the real agricultural wage rate in the short-run and a 0.83 percent change in the
long run; (3) the analysis suggests a one-time and one way upwards structural
shift of 3.6 percent in real agricultural wages during the 1980s.