The Zimbabwe Independent

Investing in female farmers

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When Africa’s women farmers thrive, everyone benefits: the women themselves, the children in whom they invest, the communitie­s that they feed, and the economies to which they contribute.

With the right investment­s and policies, Africa’s woman-run farms could produce a bumper crop of developmen­t.

Over 60% of all employed women in subSaharan Africa work in agricultur­e. Yet the region’s women farmers often reap a meager harvest, not because of inclement weather or poor soil quality, but because of their gender — or, more specifical­ly, because of a dense web of laws, policies, programmes, and customs that put them at a significan­t disadvanta­ge.

Closing the gender gap in agricultur­e will require action on three fronts. The first is land rights.

In most of sub-Saharan Africa, women rarely own land. Instead, women farmers usually access land through a male relative, most commonly a husband, brother, or father.

This arrangemen­t leaves them highly vulnerable; a death, divorce, or simply a man’s change of mind can leave a woman farmer landless overnight.

The resulting insecurity affects the way women farm. At constant risk of displaceme­nt, long-term productivi­ty-enhancing investment­s don’t make financial sense. Why build terraces to reduce erosion and improve soil health if someone else can claim the land and its improvemen­ts as soon as the work is finished? Why plant an orchard if it can simply be taken away once the final tree is in the ground?

Over the last two decades, many countries have taken important steps to promote and protect women’s land rights. For example, Ethiopia introduced joint land registrati­on — with the names and photograph­s of both husband and wife included on certificat­es— thereby formalisin­g women’s rights to the la nd they farm.

Such reform has been shown to lead increased investment in land, especially women.

The investment rises even higher among women who are also educated about their land rights, highlighti­ng the importance of legal literacy programs.

But land is only the first step. Women also lack equal access to inputs, including fertilizer, better seeds, mechanical equipment, and agricultur­al extension services that would connect them with informatio­n about improved agricultur­al practices.

This inequality is compounded by unequal access to the credit farmers need to purchase inputs. In Kenya, Malawi, Sierra Leone, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, studies have shown that women are less likely to benefit from financial services.

Improving access to financial services and agricultur­al inputs thus constitute­s the second front for empowering women farmers. Developmen­t agencies and NGO s have begun working to design woman-focused financial services and programs to improve access to agricultur­al inputs.

African women are also helping one another, with a growing number of women’s organizati­ons, such as microfinan­ce groups, working to improve access to financial services, new technologi­es, and informatio­n.

In Kenya, members of such self-help groups are likelier than other women to know about climate-smart agricultur­al practices, for example.

The final front is perhaps the trickiest: decision-making power. In far too many contexts, women farmers lack the authority to manage the crops they produce or the income they generate. This has far-reaching implicatio­ns for developmen­t.

In Sub-Saharan Africa, agricultur­e is 2-4 times more effective in reducing poverty than growth in other sectors.

Moreover, as the Goalkeeper­s report released by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation showed, women are likelier than men to invest resources under their control in meeting their children’s needs (food and education).

Given this, enabling women farmers to control their resources is important to achieving not only the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal on gender equality and empowermen­t of women and girls — but also many others, including eliminatin­g poverty and ending hunger .

Though some progress has been made on all three fronts to empower women farmers, it is nowhere near enough.

To encourage and guide further action, my colleagues at the Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute and I designed the Women’s Empowermen­t in Agricultur­e Index, which measures decision-making power, access to resources (including credit), control over income, time burdens, and membership in groups.

By providing insight into the extent and sources of women’s agricultur­al disempower­ment in various contexts, the WEAI — and a later adaptation, pro-WEAI , which facilitate­s project impact assessment­s — is helping government­s, donors, and NGO s to design effective interventi­ons.

So far, the WEAI (including adaptation­s) has been used by 99 different organizati­ons in 54 countries. For example, WEAI insights guided the design of Bangladesh’s ANG eL project, which aims to identify actions and investment­s in agricultur­e that will improve nutrition and empower women.

When Africa’s women farmers thrive, everyone benefits: the women themselves, the children in whom they invest, the communitie­s that they feed, and the economies to which they contribute.

With the right investment­s and policies, Africa’s woman-run farms could produce a bumper crop of developmen­t.— (World Economic Forum) to by

 ??  ?? Women farmers usually access land through a male relative.
Women farmers usually access land through a male relative.

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