Evaluating the Impact of Ghana's Labelling Law (LI 1541) on the Compliance Behaviours of Packaging Design Professionals
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.32996/jbms.2025.7.5.6Keywords:
Ghana; Labelling Law (LI 1541); Packaging design professionals; Compliance behaviour; Policy implementation; Designer trainingAbstract
This study tests whether Ghana’s Labelling Law (LI 1541) influences the compliance behaviour of packaging design professionals. A cross-sectional survey of designers in Accra and Kumasi (n = 327) was analysed using confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modelling (SPSS/AMOS). The measurement model met conventional thresholds (CFI = 0.937; SRMR = 0.066; standardised loadings ≥ 0.60; Cronbach’s α/CR ≥ 0.70). Perceived enforcement and requirements under LI 1541 showed a positive, significant association with compliance behaviour (β = 0.782, p = 0.005; R² = 0.509). Only 19.3% of respondents reported prior training on LI 1541, indicating a capability gap that may blunt compliance even when intent exists. We recommend pairing enforcement with targeted training, designer-facing checklists/templates, and clear guidance on mandatory label elements (e.g., ingredient order, nutrition panels, disposal cues), alongside cost-easing measures for SMEs. The paper contributes Ghana-specific, management-oriented evidence on how a national labelling statute translates into practice within design workflows.
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