North East Region's Yunyoo Nasuan poorest district in Ghana as 250 districts record poverty reduction – GSS Report
Dr Alhassan Iddrisu, the Government Statistician
Featured

North East Region's Yunyoo Nasuan poorest district in Ghana as 250 districts record poverty reduction – GSS Report

The North East Region has emerged as the epicentre of multidimensional poverty in Ghana, with six districts in the region recording the highest poverty incidences in the country, according to a historic report released by the Ghana Statistical Service on Monday, May 18, 2026.

Yunyoo Nasuan District in the North East Region recorded the highest multidimensional poverty incidence in 2025, with 51.6 per cent of its population experiencing multiple deprivations simultaneously, the report revealed. At the other end of the spectrum, Ayawaso North Municipal in the Greater Accra Region recorded the lowest poverty incidence at just 5.5 per cent.

The release marks the first time in Ghana's history that comparable multidimensional poverty estimates have been produced for all 261 districts consistently over multiple years, a milestone the Government Statistician described as a turning point for decentralised planning, poverty targeting, and evidence-based policymaking.

Encouraging progress, but deeply uneven

Out of Ghana's 261 districts, 250 recorded reductions in multidimensional poverty between 2021 and 2025, demonstrating that investments in education, healthcare, social protection, infrastructure, and livelihoods can make a difference.

However, the report also reveals that progress is deeply uneven. The gap between the highest and lowest district is more than 46 percentage points.

"This is a powerful reminder that where a person lives in Ghana still significantly shapes their opportunities and quality of life," said Dr Alhassan Iddrisu, the Government Statistician, while delivering his welcome remarks at the launch held at the Alisa Hotel in Accra on Monday (May 18, 2026).

The evidence shows that poverty remains concentrated mainly in parts of the North East, Northern, Oti, Savannah, Upper East, Upper West, and Bono East regions. The six districts with the highest poverty incidences in 2025 are all located in the North East Region.

Success stories

Some districts achieved remarkable progress. Wa West District in the Upper West Region reduced multidimensional poverty from 61.9 per cent in 2021 to 24.0 per cent in 2025, representing the largest improvement nationally. Sekyere Afram Plains in the Ashanti Region also reduced poverty dramatically from 50.5 per cent to 13.5 per cent within the same period.

"These districts show that meaningful progress can happen, even in places that once faced very high poverty levels. We must study what worked in these districts and apply the lessons everywhere," Dr Iddrisu urged.

Where poverty worsened

However, the report also identifies districts where poverty worsened. Guan District in the Oti Region recorded the largest increase in multidimensional poverty, rising from 28.1 per cent in 2021 to 34.8 per cent in 2025. Some districts also recorded only marginal improvements.

"This tells us clearly that progress cannot be assumed. It must be monitored, sustained, and strengthened continuously," the Government Statistician warned.

What is multidimensional poverty?

Dr Iddrisu explained that poverty is not only about income. Multidimensional poverty means that people experience several forms of deprivation at the same time – such as little or no education, poor housing, lack of access to clean water or sanitation, inability to find decent work, or inability to access healthcare.

"Multidimensional poverty measures whether people are able to live healthy, productive, safe, and dignified lives. A household may earn some income and still face serious deprivation in education, health, housing, sanitation, electricity, nutrition, and employment opportunities," he said.

Methodology

The estimates were produced using internationally accepted Small Area Estimation techniques, combining data from the 2021 Population and Housing Census, the 2022 to 2024 Annual Household Income and Expenditure Survey, and the 2025 Quarterly Labour Force Survey across thirteen wellbeing indicators. The result is the most detailed and comprehensive district-level poverty evidence ever produced in Ghana.

Tool for parliament, assemblies, and citizens

The Government Statistician emphasised that the district poverty rankings provide Parliament with powerful evidence to strengthen budget debates, improve oversight, guide constituency development priorities, and ensure that national resources reach districts with the greatest levels of deprivation.

"The value of this ranking is not in naming districts. The value lies in guiding action. These rankings should help government target interventions better, help Metropolitan, Municipal, and District Assemblies improve planning and budgeting, help Parliament strengthen oversight, help development partners align support with districts facing the greatest need, help businesses identify underserved communities where investments can create jobs and improve livelihoods, and help citizens demand accountability backed by evidence," he stated.

Individual fact sheets for every district

The Ghana Statistical Service has released not only the national district ranking but also individual poverty fact sheets for all 261 districts. Each fact sheet provides detailed evidence on poverty trends over time, the number of multidimensionally poor people, poverty intensity, the contribution of education, health, living conditions, and employment to poverty, the key drivers of deprivation, and practical recommendations for action.

The fact sheets are publicly available on the Ghana Statistical Service website.

A national responsibility

Dr Iddrisu concluded with a clear message: poverty reduction must move from broad national discussions to precise district-level action. Districts falling behind must receive urgent attention. Districts making progress must be supported to sustain gains. Districts that have succeeded must be studied so that their lessons can guide national policy.

"Let us therefore use this evidence boldly. Let us target resources where deprivation is deepest. Let us strengthen district planning with data. Let us align budgets with evidence. Let us monitor results honestly. And above all, let us ensure that no district and no community is left behind in Ghana's development journey," he said.

The Government Statistician also acknowledged the Government of Ghana and the Ministry of Finance for their unwavering support, and congratulated the Minister for Finance, Dr Cassiel Ato Baah Forson, for his leadership in guiding Ghana to successfully complete the three-year IMF-supported Extended Credit Facility programme.


Our newsletter gives you access to a curated selection of the most important stories daily. Don't miss out. Subscribe Now.

Connect With Us : 0242202447 | 0551484843 | 0266361755 | 059 199 7513 |