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The GSS is a Public Service body established under the Statistical Service Law 135 in 1985 by the PNDC. The first population census in Ghana began in 1891 as efforts were made to collect and disseminate statistical information.
This is a list of Ghanaian regions by population, ranked according to the latest census, which took place on 26 September 2010.Past census data (1960, 1970, 1984, and 2000) is included for comparison.
Statistics and Census Service (Macau)(DSEC) dsec.gov.mo Malaysia: Department of Statistics (Malaysia) dosm.gov.my Maldives: Maldives Bureau of Statistics: statisticsmaldives.gov.mv Mongolia: National Statists Office of Mongolia: nso.mn Myanmar: Myanmar Statistical Information Service: mmsis.gov.mm Nepal: Central Bureau of Statistics: cbs.gov.np ...
The news brief from the Ghana Statistical Service announcing the change noted that the new GDP series estimated a 60.3% larger GDP in the base year 2006 than the old GDP series. [2] This number of 60% would be echoed by other sources discussing the matter.
Grace Bediako started her career as a government statistician. She was appointed to be the head of the Ghana Statistical Service, and served from June 2004 to June 2012. [2] Prior to her career with the Government of Ghana, she was Chief of Demographic Statistics Section, United Nations Statistics Division from 2000 to 2004. [4]
Sege is a town located in the Greater Accra Region of Ghana, it is the district capital of Ada West District. [1] According to the Ghana Statistical Service's 2010 Population and Housing Census, the population of Sege was 5,990.
A Situation Analysis Study of Family Planning Service Delivery Points in Ghana (1994), with K. A. Twum-Baah, Pamela Wolf and Henry Odai, Accra: Ghana Statistical Service; The Pattern of Poverty in Ghana, 1988-1992: A Study Based on the Ghana Living Standards Survey (1995), with Harold Coulombe, Andrew McKay, Moses Avooner-Williams et al., Accra: Ghana Statistical Service
The Ghana Statistical Service reports from their 2021 census indicate that approximately eight percent (2,098,138 individuals) of the Ghanaian population experience some form of disability, with a higher prevalence among females (8.8%) than males (6.7%). [1] Disabilities are more common in rural areas (9.5%) compared to urban areas (6.5%). [1]