Manila Standard

Empowering women to lift global output

- Socioecono­mic benefits FAO News

ROME—Tackling gender inequaliti­es in agri-food systems and empowering women reduce hunger, boost the economy and reinforces resilience to shocks like climate change and the COVID-19 pandemic, a new report by the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO) shows.

The status of women in agrifood systems report, the first of its kind since 2010, goes beyond agricultur­e to provide a comprehens­ive picture of the status of women working across agri-food systems—from production to distributi­on and consumptio­n.

The report stresses that globally, 36 per cent of working women are employed in agri-food systems, along with 38 per cent of working men. However, women’s roles tend to be marginaliz­ed and their working conditions are likely to be worse than men’s—irregular, informal, part-time, low-skilled, or labor-intensive. Likewise, women engaged in wage employment in agricultur­e earn 82 cents for every dollar that men earn.

Women also have less secure tenure over land, less access to credit and training and have to work with technology designed for men. Along with discrimina­tion, these inequaliti­es create a 24-percent gender gap in productivi­ty between women and men farmers on farms of equal size.

Notably, the study underscore­s that agri-food systems are a more important source of livelihood for women than for men in many countries. For instance, in sub-Saharan Africa 66 per cent of women’s employment is in the sector, compared with 60 per cent of men. In southern Asia, women overwhelmi­ngly work in agri-food systems (71 per cent of women, versus 47 per cent of men), although fewer women than men are in the labour force.

“If we tackle the gender inequaliti­es endemic in agri-food systems and empower women, the world will take a leap forward in addressing the goals of ending poverty and creating a world free from hunger”, says FAO DirectorGe­neral QU Dongyu in the foreword of the report.

The study explains that closing the gender gap in farm productivi­ty and the wage gap in agricultur­al employment would increase global gross domestic product by nearly $1 trillion and reduce the number of food-insecure people by 45 million.

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