The Zimbabwe Independent

Malawi’s farm subsidies are not helping women

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SMALLHOLDE­R agricultur­e is the backbone of food security in many sub-Saharan African households. And women, in particular, play a central role in putting food on the table.

However, there is an imbalance between what women put in and what they get out.

Women contribute many hours to produce crops for food and for sale. But when it comes to selling crops for income they don’t reap the same benefits as men.

™is comes out clearly in the results of our new study into the Farm Input Subsidy Programme that distribute­d fertiliser vouchers to poor agricultur­al households in Malawi until 2019.

Using rich agricultur­al household survey data, we showed that these agricultur­al subsidies increased households’ incomes from selling crops. But we were more interested in what happened to women. Did they gain more than men, in relation to their central role in agricultur­al work? We looked at the low proportion of women who made decisions about incomes from selling crops, and whether agricultur­al input subsidies improved this situation.

Malawi has been at the forefront of implementi­ng policies to improve access to inputs. In the early 2000s, farm input subsidies re-emerged as a way to improve smallholde­r productivi­ty and food security. Initially, subsidies helped to move Malawi from having food shortages to having more than enough maize. ™e programme also reduced poverty, as smallholde­r farmers could sell some of their extra crops for cash.

But the country ramped up its efforts in 2020 by introducin­g the Affordable Inputs Programme. All smallholde­r farmers were targeted as beneficiar­ies. ™e budget for input subsidies almost doubled, with the aim of supporting widespread food security.

While there is optimism that many households can be reached by this large policy interventi­on, it remains uncertain who will get most of the benefit inside households. Because many women provide their labour to agricultur­e, one would expect subsidies targeted at these activities to firstly benefit them.

Our research shows that this case.

Impact

is not the

We found that the subsidy put women in an even weaker position relative to men in households. ™is is because the subsidy funded fertiliser and seeds, giving even more power to men who controlled decisions over these inputs. Most importantl­y, these gender inequaliti­es emerged in parts of the country where women were supposed to have land rights, but where these were often not respected.

A big issue is who makes decisions over agricultur­al inputs — the seed that grows into food, and fertiliser­s that help to grow more nutritious food? Men have greater access to inputs and capital that are needed to produce crops. ™ey therefore have more power to decide how income that comes from selling those crops is spent. And this starts a vicious cycle of exclusion.

Our study investigat­ed these dynamics. We studied the Farm Input Subsidy Programme, a precursor to the Affordable Inputs Programme.

Viewed as a whole, households were better off after receiving input subsidies. ™ey were more likely to take their crops to market, and income from these sales received a significan­t boost. ™ese benefits are well-known.

Matrilocal versus patrilocal communitie­s We looked at the impact of the subsidy in both matrilocal communitie­s — when the husband goes to live with the wife’s community — and patrilocal communitie­s, in which couples settle in the husband’s home or community.

Considerin­g matrilocal and patrilocal communitie­s raises the problem of uncertain land rights. In matrilinea­l societies, land rights are passed on to women. Women’s land rights are formally recognised by Malawi’s 2016 Land Act. Women should be able to make decisions about how land is cultivated and how profits are shared. In reality, men in extended families make decisions about land rights on behalf of women — and after that, their husbands make remaining decisions.

Women therefore often continue to work the land rather than playing more strategic roles.

Looking within households paints a concerning picture. Women’s agency and decision-making power is very low across the country. In patrilocal communitie­s — where couples live close to men’s extended families — only 5% of women can decide what to do with income from selling crops.

™e situation is only somewhat better in matrilocal communitie­s, where couples live close to the women’s family — 9,6% of women have this kind of bargaining power. Moving to women’s communitie­s does not remove the large imbalance between men and women.

Our research showed that agricultur­al input subsidies made things worse. After receiving subsidies, husbands in matrilocal communitie­s gained even more power to decide how incomes from crops were spent.

In fact, the patterns started to resemble the highly unequal practices in patrilocal regions more closely, where subsidies had no effect on women’s decision-making power.

Women in matrilocal areas lost some of their bargaining power, but didn’t spend less time in agricultur­al work.

Context matters. Our study supports the idea that input subsidies allow husbands to win back some of the bargaining power that sits with women’s extended families. Power moves between men in the broader community and men inside households. But the benefits of subsidies bypass women.

Alternativ­es

A low-cost policy solution is to improve the targeting of subsidies inside households. ™e Farm Input Subsidy Programme emphasised female headship as one criterion for identifyin­g which households should benefit. But this criterion alone does not address the inequaliti­es that women face inside male-headed households. Directing subsidies to the person in the household who cultivates the land seems to be a good starting point.

Policy makers should therefore spend more effort developing frameworks for identifyin­g the right beneficiar­y inside a household.

Ensuring that women gain control over inputs may not go the full length, though. If women’s existing land rights are not taken seriously, they will also have little say over income that comes from the land. While laws can be written and policies formulated, gender equality ultimately depends on the commitment of communitie­s to uphold and promote them. ™ey should be supported in doing so. — theconvers­ation.

 ??  ?? Input subsidies aren’t helping women like Malawian farmer Grace Stenala.
Input subsidies aren’t helping women like Malawian farmer Grace Stenala.
 ??  ?? Study found out that women in matrilocal areas in Malawi lost some of their bargaining power, but didn’t spend less time in agricultur­al work.
Study found out that women in matrilocal areas in Malawi lost some of their bargaining power, but didn’t spend less time in agricultur­al work.

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