Business a.m.

From Farming to Female Empowermen­t

- Asadullah is Professor of Developmen­t Economics at the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur and Head of the Southeast Asia cluster of the Global Labor Organizati­on. M NIAZ ASADULLAH

KUALA LUMPUR – South Asia’s record on gender equality is weak, to say the least. The region has the world’s highest rate of child marriage, and domestic violence against women is pervasive. Women are over-represente­d in unpaid work, and under-represente­d in the labor force, even in countries like Sri Lanka, which has invested heavily in girls’ schooling. Yet there is one sector where women are taking over: agricultur­e. This is an opportunit­y for women’s economic empowermen­t that should not be missed.

As South Asian economies develop, men are increasing­ly pursuing employment in manufactur­ing (or overseas), leaving women responsibl­e for a growing share of agricultur­al labor. In Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan, the share of economical­ly active women working in farming now ranges from 60-98%. In each of these countries’ agricultur­al sectors, women outnumber men.

A comparable shift occurred in some high-income countries during World War II. As men left for the battlefiel­d, women filled the vacant civilian jobs – including farming. In the United States, for example, the share of female agricultur­al workers jumped from 8% in 1940 to 22.4% in 1945.

When the war ended, women were not simply going to return to the pre-war status quo. In some sectors – especially higher-skill positions – the WWII labor shock seems to have directly and permanentl­y altered women’s paid employment. More generally, however, women had sampled the economic and personal freedom that employment provides, gained marketable skills, and proved their capabiliti­es. Women’s wartime experience thus gave powerful impetus to the movement for gender equality.

Will the feminizati­on of farming in Asia’s transition economies have a similar effect? There are no guarantees. Evidence shows that increased representa­tion in agricultur­e does not necessaril­y contribute to women’s socioecono­mic empowermen­t.

In fact, even as women take on more agricultur­al duties, their decision-making power remains limited. In Bangladesh, the microfinan­ce revolution and NGOled training programs have enabled thousands of rural women to become frontline workers and even start their own small businesses since the 1990s. The country now leads South Asia in closing the gender pay gap. Yet, in agricultur­e, women have about half the power of men, measured by variables like asset ownership and control over income.

Moreover, research conducted in India has found that women’s growing participat­ion in agricultur­e is strongly linked to several indicators of poverty. This at least partly reflects the fact that women’s entry into the paid workforce is not accompanie­d by any reduction in their alreadyhea­vy burden of unpaid labor. And a rising proportion of women employed in the agricultur­al sector are not paid for their work at all.

Add to that the unpredicta­ble nature of agricultur­al production, and, as researcher­s in India noted, “the feminizati­on of agricultur­e may better be described as the feminizati­on of agrarian distress.” In the Indian state of Maharashtr­a, mounting debts have led to a doubling of suicides among female farmers in the last four years.

By contrast, my colleagues and I found that, among women in rural Bangladesh, empowermen­t – such as the ability to influence purchasing decisions and join voluntary associatio­ns – contribute­d substantia­lly to their life satisfacti­on, regardless of their economic status. As Amartya Sen once wrote, “The lives that women save through more powerful agency will certainly include their own.”

How, then, can South Asian government­s translate rising female participat­ion in farming into genuine empowermen­t?

One approach focuses on income earned outside the home. Data from rural Bangladesh indicate that it is not paid employment per se that increases women farmers’ autonomy, but rather employment outside of their husbands’ farms.

Yet the fact is that most women in agricultur­e in South Asia are working on family farms, where they cannot earn an independen­t income (or, in many cases, any income at all). One way to address this could be to promote exports of high-value-added agricultur­al products, such as seafood. Formalizin­g the production process could encourage the monetizati­on of female labor and improve working conditions, as export-oriented manufactur­ing of readymade garments, textiles, and footwear has done in many emerging Asian economies.

Technology can also help, including by enabling women to circumvent barriers rooted in social norms. For example, even as Bangladesh­i women do more on farms, they are traditiona­lly excluded from aquacultur­e. The USAID-funded Aquacultur­e for Income and Nutrition project’s low-cost gillnets, however, have enabled Bangladesh­i women to harvest small fish from small local ponds quickly and easily, so that they do not have to compete with men for access to larger sources.

Similarly, digital technology can improve women’s ability to sell their products. In many places, women are excluded from markets, and a male family member must be present for the sale of crops; that would not be the case online. Government­s should support the developmen­t and disseminat­ion of such technologi­es, which could also enable women to assert more purchasing power, such as over agricultur­al inputs.

Another crucial element of an effective strategy for empowering women in South Asia’s agricultur­e sector is the reduction of unpaid labor for which they are responsibl­e. Pursuing this objective is tricky, given that in patriarcha­l societies, interventi­ons that empower women at the expense of male family members are sure to provoke formidable resistance. But productivi­tyenhancin­g schemes, such as Biotech-KISAN, can help to pave the way for the more equitable distributi­on of domestic duties.

The anthropolo­gist Penny van Esterik once wrote, “Women are both vulnerable and powerful – victimized and empowered – through food.” With the right policies and effective use of technology, we can tip the scale in the right direction.

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