Africa's big gender gap in agriculture #AfricaBigIdeas

From AfricaCan End Poverty Mon Jul 7 2014, 16:20:00

Women are less productive farmers than men in Sub-Saharan Africa. A new evidence-based policy report from the World Bank and the ONE Campaign, Leveling the Field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa, shows just how large these gender gaps are. In Ethiopia, for example, women produce 23% less per hectare than men. While this finding might not be a "big" counter-intuitive idea (or a particularly new one), it's a costly reality that has big implications for women and their children, households, and national economies.

The policy prescription for Africa's gender gap has seemed straightforward: help women access the same amounts of productive resources (including farm inputs) as men and they will achieve similar farm yields. Numerous flagship reports and academic papers have made this very argument.

[view whole blog post ]
 See More    |     Report Abuse


You might also be interested in the following news stories:

Afrique:  Revue de presse de l'Afrique Francophone du 05 Mai 2024 (news)
allAfrica.com
5 Mai 2024

 Burkina Faso :  Droits de l’Homme- La junte convoque des diplomates américain et anglais   Le pays a rejeté un rapport de Human Rights Watch (HRW) qui accuse ... [read more]

Afrique:  Après des semaines de hausse, le cours du cacao est en chute libre (news)
Radio France Internationale
4 Mai 2024

Le prix du cacao connait actuellement une chute vertigineuse sur les places financières. Après la flambée des prix de ces derniers mois, les cours ont enregistré leur plus ... [read more]

Afrique:  Rapport de la FAO - L'Afrique face à la recrudescence de la faim dans le monde (news)
Les Dépêches de Brazzaville
4 Mai 2024

La faim dans le monde s'accentue. C'est ce qu'indique le rapport annuel sur les crises alimentaires de la FAO. En 2023, plus de 280 millions de personnes étaient en situation de malnutrition ... [read more]



blogAfrica is allAfrica.com's platform to help you keep an ear on the African blogosphere. We draw diverse voices from around the world who post regularly and insightfully about African issues. Bloggers, submit your blog's rss-feed!