86039 Grain is being harvested in Kolu, Ethiopia. Photo: Petterik Wiggers / IWMI LevelLing the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 02 Acknowledgements 04 Foreword 06 Introduction 09 Key Findings 15 Part 1: Country Profiles 15 Introduction 20 Ethiopia 22 Malawi 24 Niger 26 Nigeria 30 Tanzania 32 Uganda 34 Summing It Up: Key Drivers of the Gender Gap 41 Part 2: Policy Priorities for Narrowing the Gender Gap in African Agriculture 63 Appendices 63 Appendix 1: Comparability of Country Profiles 64 Appendix 2: Women Farmers and Household Headship 65 Appendix 3: Going Beyond the Survey Data: Other Factors that May Matter for the Gender Gap 67 Appendix 4: Evidence and Implementation Guide for Policy Options to Narrow the Gender Gap 73 Appendix 5: Technical Annex on Decomposition Methods 77 Endnotes Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 1 Acknowledgements his report was prepared by a core team of authors led by Saharan Africa” and whose individual authors are listed in the references. In addition, Michael O’Sullivan from the World Bank and Arathi Rao from the ONE a number of people provided country- and topic-specific support. For the country Campaign. Core authors included Raka Banerjee, Kajal Gulati and analysis section, Talip Kilic provided research on Malawi, provided the technical Margaux Vinez. annex (Appendix 5) and assisted with additional calculations and clarifications. Gbemisola Oseni provided support on Nigeria and on general concerns. The report is a joint production of the World Bank and the ONE Campaign. Amparo Palacios-Lopez supplied knowledge on Malawi. Eliana Carranza and Contributing groups from the World Bank include the Africa Region Gender Practice Arturo Aguilar gave essential information for Ethiopia. Vanya Slavchevska worked (ARGP), the Development Economics Research Group Living Standards to deliver results from Tanzania. Prospere Backiny-Yetna and Kevin McGee provided Measurement Survey – Integrated Surveys on Agriculture (LSMS-ISA) team and the information on Niger. Daniel Ayalew Ali, Derick Bowen, Klaus Deininger and Africa Region Agriculture, Rural Development and Irrigation Unit (AFTAR). The work Marguerite Duponchel presented findings from Uganda, while Ana Paula de la O Campos was managed by the Africa Region Gender Practice Leader, Markus Goldstein, with and Alberto Prieto also contributed information. For guidance on policy Emilie Greenhalgh providing assistance with writing, editing and coordination. recommendations, the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) offered Sara Harcourt was lead editor and directed the publication team at ONE, while considerable assistance. The team would particularly like to thank key members Caitlyn Mitchell managed the report’s production. Catherine Blampied of ONE was a from IFPRI who contributed insights for the report, including Agnes Quisumbing, contributing writer. Copy-editing was provided by David Wilson. The report’s design John Hoddinott and Alan De Brauw. Amber Peterman (University of North Carolina at and art direction were guided by Christopher Mattox and ONE designer, Chapel Hill) and Jenny Aker (Tufts University) also assisted with valuable information. Elizabeth Brady. The LSMS-ISA team contributed the data for all of the country analyses. This report was produced under the valuable guidance of the ONE Campaign’s Useful comments on drafts of the report were also received from ONE staff: Adrian Lovett, Jamie Drummond and Sipho Moyo and Marcelo Guigale, Director of the Nachilala Nkombo, Eloise Todd, Tamira Gunzburg, Tobias Kahler, Andreas Huebers, World Bank Africa Region Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit and Diane Sheard and Friederike Röder. Kelsey Jack (Tufts University), Molly Kinder (Global Makhtar Diop, Vice President of the Africa Region. Development Innovation Ventures) and Philippe Dongier, Paul Numba Um, Marie Françoise Marie-Nelly, Guang Zhe Chen, Kundavi Kadiresan, Rachel Sebudde, A panel of advisors comprising Francisco Ferreira, David Evans, Tijan M. Sallah, Catherine Asekenye Barasa and Laura Kullenberg (all of the World Bank) provided Severin Kodderitzsch, Martien Van Nieuwkoop, Calogero Carletto and Aparajita Goyal of feedback on the overall report. The team also thanks Malcolm Ehrenpreis, the World Bank provided excellent counsel on the report. Eija Pehu, Pirkko Poutiainen, Katherine Manchester and Niklas Buehren from the World Bank Africa Region Gender Lynn Brown, Christine Heumesser, Donald Larson (all of the World Bank) and Innovation Lab and David Hong and Elisa Desbordes-Cisse from the ONE Campaign, Cheryl Doss (Yale University) delivered valuable, comprehensive comments for their constant support for various components throughout the preparation and and contributions for the report concept note and final output review. launch of the report. The report team benefited greatly from meetings and consultations with a variety The World Bank team would like to acknowledge the generous support of the World of actors whose background research contributed to it. The country profiles are based Bank’s Africa Region Vice Presidency and the Umbrella Fund for Gender Equality. The on a set of studies conducted under the LSMS programme “Gender Differentials in ONE Campaign would like to thank the Caterpillar Foundation for its kind contribution Agricultural Productivity: Identifying Opportunities for Agricultural Growth in Sub- to the report’s production. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 2 The ONE Campaign would like to thank its board members and trusted advisors: Zohra Dawood, Eleni Z. Gabre-Madhin, Neville Gabriel, John Githongo, Angélique Kidjo, Bono, Joshua Bolten, Howard G. Buffett, Susie A. Buffett, Joe Cerrell, John Doerr, Acha Leke, Dr. Xiaoyun Li, Jon Lomøy, Bunmi Makinwa, Susan Mashibe, Jamie Drummond, Michael Elliott, Tom Freston, Helene D. Gayle, Morton H. Halperin, Dr. Richard Mkandawire, Archbishop Njongonkulu Ndugane, Ory Okolloh, Arunma Oteh, Mo Ibrahim, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Ronald O. Perelman, Jeff Raikes, Condoleezza Rice, Rakesh R. Rajani, Mandla Sibeko, John Ulanga and Russell Wildeman. ONE is also Sheryl Sandberg, Kevin Sheekey, Bobby Shriver and Lawrence Summers, as well as grateful to its distinguished International Patron, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, for his ONE’s Africa Policy Advisory Board members: Dr. Melvin Ayogu, Amadou Mahtar Ba, support and guidance. Owen Barder, David Barnard, Erik Charas, Romy Chevallier, Paul Collier, Nic Dawes, Enumerator carrying out compass-and-rope area measurement in Nigeria. Photo: Sydney Gourlay / World Bank Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 3 foreword cross sub-Saharan Africa agriculture is the backbone of the economy, population. It presents the clearest evidence to date about both the breadth and the accounting for 30-40% of nations’ gross domestic product, and a leading depth of the gender gap in African agriculture. source of jobs for over two-thirds of the population. Improving the productivity, profitability and sustainability of agriculture on the millions of The report’s recommendations offer a menu of actions that governments can farms that cover the African continent is essential for ending poverty and boosting consider in their efforts to boost farm productivity for the benefit of women farmers shared prosperity in the region. across the continent. It argues that by spearheading proven, effective policies that target the needs of female farmers – for example, strengthening land rights, Even though women make up a large share of Africa’s farmers, they are, for the most improving market access, increasing women’s access to labour and labour-saving part, locked out of land ownership, access to credit and productive farm inputs, tools, improved seeds and quality fertilisers, and investing in raising human capital, support from extension services and access to markets, to name just a few factors while leveraging social networks for better child-care and spreading agricultural essential to their productivity. This array of daunting challenges means that, on knowledge – governments can help farming families tackle the low-productivity traps average, Africa’s female farmers produce less per hectare compared with men, which that entrench poverty and prevent millions of farmers from leading decent lives. adversely affects their families, communities and – in the long term – entire countries. This joint report from the World Bank Africa Region’s Gender Innovation Lab and the ONE Campaign comes at an opportune time, as the African Union Commission has Despite the centrality of agriculture in the economies of most African nations, declared 2014 to be the “Year of Agriculture and Food Security” in Africa. We are relatively little is known about why farms managed by women are on average less hopeful that the findings will have broad appeal to policy-makers and the wider productive. This “knowledge gap” in turn translates into a “policy gap” in the steps development community and will catalyse actions and partnerships for promoting that African governments, their development partners, business leaders and civil sustainable agricultural development in sub-Saharan Africa. society can take to equalise opportunities for female and male farmers. Empowering Africa’s women farmers and supporting them in their efforts to increase This new report, “Levelling the Field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in food production is an idea whose time has come. By tackling the low productivity that Africa”, jointly produced by the World Bank in partnership with the ONE Campaign, ails African agriculture, we can help unleash the potential of the farm economy to be seeks to focus international attention on the impediments that Africa’s women a major driver of economic growth, providing jobs as well as food, income and farmers face in feeding their families, increasing farm incomes and lifting the heavy nutrition security. Through concerted action, we can make tangible improvements in burden of poverty in rural areas. the lives of African farmers, women and men alike. By combining information and backing it up with new surveys that allow for the disaggregation of results by gender, this report uncovers new evidence that explains some of the factors responsible for the low productivity of female-managed farms in Africa. The report profiles six countries – Ethiopia, Malawi, Niger, Nigeria, Tanzania and Makhtar Diop Uganda – that together account for more than 40% of sub-Saharan Africa’s Vice President, Africa Region, The World Bank Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 4 foreword – the African Union (AU) Year of Agriculture and Food way. Integral to the campaign is a desire to achieve real socio-economic Security – is a year of great, and potentially historic, transformation through policies that will narrow the gender gap, seeking to ensure opportunity. At the AU summit in Equatorial Guinea that the benefits of investment in agriculture are equitably shared and that women’s this June, African leaders will have the chance to increased productivity will reap rewards for the whole sector. renew their commitments to agricultural growth and development. It is an opportunity I hope leaders will seize with both hands, because a revitalised agriculture At the launch of the Do Agric campaign in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, I met Elizabeth sector is essential to ending extreme poverty, growing our economies and thereby Nsimadala, a young female farmer from Uganda who left a strong impression on me transforming the lives of millions of smallholder farmers on the continent. and confirmed for me that the role of women in agriculture needs to be supported if we are to harness the potential of agriculture to achieve economic transformation. Ten years ago, at the AU summit in Maputo, Mozambique, African leaders made bold She told the audience, “I am a proud, successful farmer; I am above the salary scale commitments to tackle the underinvestment in agriculture that for so long had been of public sector servants in Uganda. I do agriculture not only because it pays, but a stumbling block to progress. Recognising the enormous potential locked within the because I can do it better.” Sadly Elizabeth’s story is the exception, not the rule. For sector, headline pledges were made to allocate at least 10% of national budgets to too long, Africa’s women farmers have been neglected and have faced significant agriculture, to adopt sound development policies and to achieve at least 6% growth in disadvantages, struggling to secure their land, hire farm labour and access inputs the sector. But a decade later many countries have not made substantial progress on such as fertiliser. these commitments, and tellingly their investment plans have not adequately addressed key priority areas, such as the persistent gender gap in African agriculture. This report, developed in partnership with the World Bank, presents the strongest evidence to date of just how deep and entrenched the gender gap in African It is clear that we ignore this gender gap at our peril and ultimately at great cost. It is a agriculture really is, and what needs to be done about it. It outlines a number of policy real injustice to Africa’s women farmers and their families that women make up recommendations for governments to consider to better support women farmers. nearly half of the labour force in agriculture but, on average, produce less per Above all, it should serve as a wake-up call to African leaders and development hectare than men. This absurd gender gap driven by women’s disadvantages in partners that the time is ripe for action and that progress is possible. If governments securing their land rights, accessing labour, and other factors, further undermines and partners invest in agriculture and, in particular, its women farmers today, they can the sector’s potential to drive inclusive economic growth, improve food security and be assured of a legacy of greater equality and boundless opportunity that will benefit create employment and business opportunities for millions of young Africans Africans for generations to come and just may usher the beginning of the end of aid entering the job market every year. dependence for our people. ONE has recently launched a new campaign, Do Agric, It Pays, calling for African governments to commit to spending at least 10% of national budgets on effective agriculture investments, through transparent and accountable budgets. And, more importantly, to adopt smart, targeted policies that will boost agricultural productivity, Sipho Moyo increase the incomes of smallholder farmers and help create good jobs and viable Africa Director, ONE Campaign business opportunities, lifting millions of Africans out of extreme poverty along the Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 5 introduction here is a growing recognition of agriculture’s potential to spur growth and family, especially her children. Families in which women influence economic reduce poverty in Africa.1 Agriculture accounts for one-third of the decisions allocate more income to food, health, education and children’s nutrition.8 continent’s gross domestic product (GDP), and two-thirds of its citizens rely Improving gender equality through agriculture could therefore translate into a on the sector for their incomes.2 Investments in agriculture will hence not generation of Africans who are better fed, better educated and better equipped to only improve productivity and the continent’s ability to feed a growing population, but make productive contributions to their economies, within agriculture and beyond. will also lift families out of poverty. Over 90% of sub-Saharan Africa’s extreme poor are engaged in agriculture,3 and growth originating in the sector is 2–4 times more Recognising these opportunities, many African policy-makers, donor governments effective at directly reducing poverty than growth originating in other sectors.4 and development partners have turned their attention to the gender gap in agriculture. Several leaders have championed the importance of supporting Africa’s Yet agriculture in Africa has not fulfilled its potential, suffering from a lack of female farmers. Yet despite their words of support, these efforts have not always investment and insufficient attention from policy-makers. A key hindrance to translated into targeted policies in country agricultural plans. Nor have important agricultural development and broader growth is a wide and pervasive gender gap in regional and international efforts adequately addressed the gender gap. agricultural productivity. Women comprise nearly half of the labour force in Africa’s agriculture sector, and more than half in several countries,5 but on the whole they Recently, development agencies and donors have increasingly incorporated gender produce less per hectare than men.i Existing evidence from small-scale studies analysis into their agricultural programming and their monitoring and evaluation across the continent documents the numerous disadvantages that women face in (M&E). FAO aims to allocate 30% of its operational budgets to programmes targeted accessing the same resources, training, markets and opportunities as men. They also at women by 2017.9 Nearly 80% of the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program face ingrained norms and institutional barriers that further widen the gap. Tackling the (GAFSP)’s operations include gender analysis as part of the project design.10 The US barriers that hold back the productivity of female farmers could both enhance gender Agency for International Development (USAID) launched the Women’s Empowerment equality and usher in broader economic growth. in Agriculture Index in 2012 to measure progress towards inclusive growth in all 19 of its “Feed the Future” countries.11 And while 95% of the World Bank’s agriculture and Investing in women farmers and instituting policies that close this gender gap in rural development projects have successfully integrated gender issues into their African agriculture could yield enormous benefits for women and their families, monitoring and design, there is now a greater emphasis on rigorously measuring the communities and countries. Closing the gender gap could help increase food security impact on both women’s and men’s lives. and improve livelihoods for Africa’s growing population, which is expected to quadruple within the next 90 years.6 If women worldwide had the same access to These initiatives are promising, but they could be enhanced by a better productive resources as men, they could increase yields on their farms by 20–30% understanding of the underlying factors that actually cause the gender gap, including and raise total agricultural output by 2.5–4%.7 The UN Food and Agriculture how these factors vary across different countries and regions, and what policies can Organization (FAO) estimates that the gains in agricultural production alone could lift be effectively employed to bridge the gap. Available data on these fronts has thus far 100 to 150 million people out of hunger. been insufficient; for too long, policy-makers have lacked high-quality, consistent data on agriculture, let alone sex-disaggregated data.12 National-level surveys often Closing the gap may also benefit Africa’s next generation. When a woman gains more do not even report whether farmers are men or women. Measurements of women’s control over her income, she gains more say over important decisions that affect her access to land and other resources have not been comparable across or even within i Women’s labour contribution to crop production ranges from 24% to 56% across the six countries profiled in this report. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 6 countries, and most evidence of the gender gap is based on small-scale surveys that extension information), but also assesses the returns that women receive from these do not allow for broader generalisation.13 resources, or how well these resources actually translate into increased agricultural productivity. In doing so, it discovers that in many countries, even when women have This report, “Levelling the Field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in access to the same amount of a given input as men, equal access does not achieve Africa”, marshals fresh, new evidence measuring the gender gap in African agriculture the same effect in terms of agricultural productivity. This novel insight points to and provides detailed analysis of the factors that account for this gap in six African broader norms, market failures or institutional constraints that influence the countries. To this end, the report makes three specific contributions. effectiveness of these resources for women. These crucial new findings will empower governments and development organisations to develop policies that better address First, in Part 1: Country Profiles, this report provides a more robust assessment of the the resource disparities behind the productivity gap and enable women to derive gender gaps in agricultural productivity across six African countries, using data greater benefits from the resources they have. collected by national statistics offices with assistance from the Living Standards Measurement Study – Integrated Surveys on Agriculture (LSMS-ISA) programme. In Finally, Part 2: Policy Priorities sets out several concrete policy proposals to address contrast to prior available data, the LSMS-ISA surveys are nationally representative the main constraints that women farmers face, as identified across the country and contain information at the individual farm manager and plot levels to allow for profiles. Drawing upon a nascent evidence base, these policy proposals highlight both rich, detailed analyses of gender dynamics in agriculture. The six country datasets promising interventions and emerging new ideas. Agricultural policy, in many African that the LSMS-ISA programme has released to date – for Ethiopia, Niger, Nigeria, countries, has not distinguished between men and women farmers and their different Malawi, Tanzania and Uganda – cover more than 40% of the population of sub- needs. Yet the persistent gender gap evident in the countries profiled in this report Saharan Africa. The breadth and depth that this data captures will equip policy- underscores that a shift in thinking is long overdue: African leaders must better makers with a more accurate, nuanced understanding of the costly inequalities within attune existing agricultural policies to the issues that undermine the productivity of their agriculture sectors. female farmers, and they must design and implement new policies to address the needs of female farmers in order to boost agricultural productivity. Donors can play a Second, within the country profiles and the summary of key drivers, the report catalytic role in this endeavour by supporting the development and rigorous identifies the precise factors responsible for the gender gap in each of these six evaluation of these critical programmes, thereby expanding knowledge of effective countries through the use of decomposition analysis, a statistical method that is measures that support female farmers. normally used in labour economics. By applying this method to the agriculture sector, it yields new insights on the effects of various factors on women’s productivity. The African Union has declared 2014 to be the “Year of Agriculture and Food Security”, Women farmers face a wide array of obstacles, including accessing and benefiting bringing much needed attention to the sector’s potential to transform the continent. from key inputs (such as fertiliser and agricultural information), hiring farm labourers, This is an opportunity not only to revitalise the agriculture sector, but to rally African mobilising household labour and balancing farm work with child-care and household governments and development organisations to commit to concrete policy action to responsibilities. Previous research into the gender gap has focused on women’s redress the inequalities within the sector, and in so doing to reap greater rewards from access to these inputs, concluding that if women had better access, they would be future investments. equally productive. The methodology in this report, however, looks not only at the quantity and levels of resources that women use (whether labour, fertiliser or Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 7 Often, older women are the sole care-givers for their grandchildren, due to the effects of poverty on communities. Enabling these women to receive more benefits out of their farms helps them as well as the next generation. Photo: Laura Elizabeth Pohl / Bread for the World Key Findings 1 Women farmers consistently produce less per hectare than their male counterparts.i This report, profiling six countries that comprise more than 40% of sub-Saharan plots produce on average 25% more per hectare than female-managed plots. A more Africa’s population, presents the clearest evidence to date attesting to the breadth refined measure of these gaps, accounting for differences in plot size and geographic and depth of the gender gap in African agriculture. A simple comparison of average factors, reveals a starker picture: When comparing women and men with similar- male and female productivity shows that the gaps range from a low of 13% in Uganda sized plots in a similar context, the gender gaps range from 23% in Tanzania to a to a high of 25% in Malawi.ii This suggests that in Malawi, for instance, male-managed strikingly large 66% in Niger.iii Figure 1: Gender Gaps in Agricultural Productivity, by Country Simple Difference Difference after Accounting for Plot Size and Regions Ethiopia 23% *** Ethiopia 24% *** Malawi 25%*** Malawi 25%*** Niger 19%*** Niger 66%*** North 4% North 46%*** Nigeria Nigeria South 24%* South 17% Tanzania 6% Tanzania 23%*** Uganda 13%*** Uganda 33%*** 0 10 20 30 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Note: The symbols */**/*** denote statistical significance at the 10%, 5% and 1% levels respectively. i The terms “women farmers”, “female farmers” and “female plot managers” are used interchangeably throughout this report and indicate women who make important managerial decisions about a given plot of farmland. Box 1 in the Country Profiles Introduction provides more information about this definition. ii The gaps in Tanzania and northern Nigeria are statistically insignificant based on a simple comparison. iii The gap in southern Nigeria is statistically insignificant with this refined measure, probably due to a relatively small sample size. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 9 2 The gender gap is caused by more than unequal access to inputs; women also face unequal returns to the inputs they have. Previous research highlighting the gender gap in agriculture has focused exclusively broader norms, market failures or institutional constraints that alter the effectiveness on women’s access to key inputs, such as fertiliser, agricultural information and farm of these resources for women. For example, women in Ethiopia and Uganda benefit labour, concluding that if women had better access, they would be equally productive. less than men, in terms of increased agricultural productivity,iv from extension advice The methodology in this report looks not only at the quantity and levels of resources that their households receive, suggesting that current agricultural extension that women use, but also assesses the returns that they receive from these programmes may be better attuned to the needs of male farmers. These crucial new resources, or how well these resources actually translate into increased agricultural findings will empower governments and development organisations to better tailor productivity. In doing so, the report reveals that in many countries, even when women policies and programmes to those issues and constraints that are most critical to the have access to the same amount of inputs as men, equal access does not achieve livelihoods of women farmers in their countries. the same effect in terms of agricultural productivity. This novel insight points to Focusing on the key drivers of the gender gap in individual countries can both enhance gender equality and foster 3 economic growth. Women farmers face numerous disadvantages, such as barriers to accessing credit due to widowhood, migration or divorce. Consequently, women farmers across Ethiopia, and lower levels of education, though not all of these disparities contribute equally to Malawi, northern Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda have fewer household members to the gender gap, if at all. This report provides evidence on the principal factors behind provide labour on the farm or support in the home. Even after taking into account the gender gap, as well as the relative importance of these particular factors. For household size, female farmers in Malawi, Niger, southern Nigeria and Tanzania deploy example, in Malawi women use lower levels of agricultural inputs on their plots, fewer household male labourers on their plots. Further, in all these countries except including fertiliser and extension services, than men, and this difference accounts for Nigeria, these male labourers generate lower returns for female farmers relative to male more than 80% of the gender gap in productivity in that country. The report also farmers. Female farmers also face challenges in hiring effective outside labour. These shows that not every factor matters in each country. By focusing political attention findings suggest that women may not be able to afford to pay as much as men for and marshalling resources to tackle the specific issues identified in their respective effective farm workers; that cultural norms may mean that these labourers work harder countries, policy-makers, practitioners and development partners can begin to for a male supervisor; and/or that women’s time constraints (due to their household address gender equality and help usher in greater productivity and growth. This report roles) may affect their ability to supervise their farm labourers. Indeed, women typically reveals the following to be key drivers of the gender gap in the six countries analysed. assume a larger role in child-care and household responsibilities than men, which is likely to restrict their ability to work on their own farms or manage their labourers. Men, meanwhile, tend to have greater control over how to allocate family labour, including Labour poses the main barrier to achieving equality in productivity that of younger household members. For these reasons, having a larger proportion of across all the countries profiled. To address this inequality, African children in the household (relative to adults) reduces women’s productivity more than governments and donors must do more to develop effective policies and men’s in Malawi, Niger, southern Nigeria and Uganda. programmes to help female farmers overcome this barrier. Agriculture in Africa depends heavily on manual labour, supplied by farmers’ Despite the fact that female farmers across all six profiled countries face these types households, families and communities. Yet women farmers face many difficulties in of labour challenges, evidence on policies aiming to help women overcome these mobilising extra help to work on their farms, and these challenges begin in the home. barriers is rare. For these reasons, African governments and donors must prioritise On average, female farmers tend to live in smaller households with fewer men, possibly attention in this area and develop effective programmes that help women farmers iv Statements explaining the returns findings in this section and the rest of the report assume that all other variables are held constant. Appendix 1 provides more information on the variables controlled for in the individual studies. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 10 hire outside labour, use tools and equipment that reduce the amount of labour they and particularly information attuned to their needs. Women farmers tend to receive require on the farm and access community-based child-care. second-hand information from husbands and friends if they are not the head of their household. Furthermore, they may not attend training activities due to household responsibilities or mobility constraints, and they may not be able to interact Differences in the use of, and returns to, fertiliser and other non-labour effectively with male extension agents due to cultural norms.2 In fact, this report inputs matter for the gender gap. shows that women in Ethiopia and Uganda benefit less than men, in terms of Women have unequal access to a variety of productive inputs,1 and this report also increased agricultural productivity, from some sources of extension advice that their demonstrates the importance of unequal returns to those inputs. Indeed, differences households receive, suggesting that current agricultural extension programmes may in input use and returns contribute to the gender gap across all the countries profiled. be better attuned to the needs of male farmers. Female farmers in Malawi, In Malawi, Niger, northern Nigeria and Uganda, women use lower overall levels of meanwhile, belong to households that receive less technical guidance on agricultural fertiliser than men, which reduces their relative agricultural productivity. In Ethiopia production and marketing, which contributes to the gender gap. Policy-makers in and Tanzania, gender differences in returns to fertiliser contribute to the gap, these countries should consider better tailoring extension services to women’s needs suggesting that female farmers in these countries use lower-quality fertiliser, apply and spreading agricultural knowledge through other mechanisms, perhaps including the input incorrectly or use it at the wrong time. African governments and donors women’s social networks. should support programmes that encourage women to apply higher levels of fertiliser and other non-labour inputs to their plots, and to secure better-quality fertiliser. The gender gap in education, prevalent in previous decades, continues to affect women farmers today. Even after a woman accesses farm land, other associated challenges can Although countries across Africa have recently made great strides in achieving limit her productivity. gender parity in schooling, the gender inequalities of previous decades continue to Access to, and control of, land are critical for agricultural investment and rural have an impact on today’s gender productivity gap. Differences in schooling between household welfare. Yet statutory and customary land tenure systems often male and female farmers translate into differences in agricultural productivity in disadvantage rural women, who are less likely to control land than rural men, and Uganda and, to a lesser degree, Malawi. Policy-makers in these countries should women’s insecurity of tenure reduces their investments in their land, thus therefore strive to raise the education levels of women farmers to help close the undermining their productivity. The analysis in this report can shed only partial light on productivity gap. complex issues related to land access and control. Nevertheless, it suggests that a number of factors relating to land (beyond access itself) can help explain the gender Improving women’s access to markets and enabling female farmers to gap. One of these challenges relates to land size. In Ethiopia and Tanzania, women shift into high-value commercial agriculture both show promise. receive lower returns than men to an extra hectare of land. This could be due to lower quality of the land, but it could also be due to women’s relative difficulty in managing In Malawi, women farmers are less likely to cultivate export crops, such as tobacco, farm labour or the application of other inputs across larger tracts of land. African than men. This difference contributes substantially to the country’s gender gap governments must focus on strengthening women’s land rights in order to begin to because these export crops command a higher market value than traditional staple address these issues undermining their productivity. crops. Yet in Malawi, northern Nigeria and Uganda, female farmers enjoy higher returns than male farmers from switching into high-value agriculture. Policies that leverage this advantage can therefore enhance gender equality and boost Agricultural extension and information do not improve female farmers’ agricultural growth. productivity to the same degree as that of male farmers. Knowledge and training in farming methods and techniques are critical for both women and men, but women farmers tend to have less access to this information, Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 11 2014 offers an historic opportunity for African policy-makers, donor governments and development partners to move the 4 agenda forward and commit to concrete policy action to redress the gender gap in African agriculture. In many African countries, agricultural policy has not distinguished between men and interventions, for which existing evidence indicates a high potential for success, and women farmers and their different needs. The persistent gender gap, documented in emerging interventions, which may benefit from further testing. this report, underscores the fact that a shift in thinking is long overdue: Existing agricultural policies need to become better attuned to the issues that undermine the Meanwhile, given the limited knowledge of effective policies to date, donors and productivity of female farmers, and new policies and programmes must be designed development organisations can play a catalytic role in supporting African and implemented to meet their needs. Without sufficient attention to increasing governments to close the gender gap in agriculture by taking the following measures: women’s productivity, an opportunity for growth in agriculture will remain unexploited, and broader development efforts will be hampered. • Create a “challenge fund” to support the piloting and scaling up of effective policies to support female farmers and close the gender gap. The African Union has declared 2014 to be the “Year of Agriculture and Food • Support national agriculture plans with clear attention to the differing needs of male and female farmers. Security”, bringing much needed attention to the sector’s potential to transform the continent. As part of this historic year, African governments should make a new, • Consider this report’s findings in relation to donor programmes and continue robust commitment to narrow the gender gap in agriculture, and should unveil this to use gender analysis to inform the design of programmes, and collect commitment at the African Union Summit in Equatorial Guinea this June. sex-disaggregated data as part of the monitoring and evaluation of programme impacts. To make progress in narrowing this gap, African leaders should consider the ten policy priorities and options detailed in this report to address the particular challenges in These steps will mark an important turning point for Africa’s women farmers, towards their countries (see Table 1). These policy priorities are informed by the report’s new the opportunity and equality they rightfully deserve. and comprehensive evidence of the main drivers of the gender gap. Based on the best available research and impact evaluation evidence, they provide both promising Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 12 Table 1: Ten Policy Priorities for Narrowing the Gender Gap in African Agriculture KEY Driver Policy PRIORITY Policy Option Formalise land rights through registration to increase women’s tenure security. Land 1. Strengthen women’s land rights. Expand co-titling and individual titling for women. Reform family and inheritance law to protect women’s rights. Offer women farmers financing to hire farm labour. 2. Improve women’s access to hired labour. Task agents with helping women farmers to find labour. Labour 3. Enhance women’s use of tools and equipment that reduce the Provide women farmers with financing or discounts for hiring or purchasing machinery. amount of labour they require on the farm. 4. Provide community-based child-care centres. Provide community-based child-care centres. Provide women farmers with financing or price discounts aligned with their cash flow to 5. Encourage women farmers to use more, and higher-quality, fertiliser. encourage the purchase of fertiliser. Non-Labour Inputs Certify small bags of fertiliser for use by women. Provide flexible financing for seeds. 6. Increase women’s use of improved seeds. Help women better identify and obtain good-quality seed. Train extension agents to target female farmers and be more responsive to their agricultural information needs. 7. Tailor extension services to women’s needs, and leverage social Bring agricultural training and advice to women’s doorsteps through farmer field schools Information networks to spread agricultural knowledge. and mobile phone applications. Identify female volunteer farm advisors to spread information within women’s social networks. 8. Promote women’s cultivation of high-value/cash crops. Promote women’s cultivation of high-value/cash crops. Access to Markets Provide market services through information and communications technology (ICT). 9. Facilitate women’s access to and effective participation in markets. Channel existing groups to access market opportunities. Human Capital 10. Raise education levels of adult female farmers. Raise education levels of adult female farmers. Promising policy option (based on available evidence) Emerging policy option (based on available evidence) Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 13 A female farmer sells her surplus sweet potatoes at a market in Mwasonge, Tanzania. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa Photo: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation 14 Part 1: country profiles hile there is broad recognition that gender disparities exist in decomposition (see Box 3).3 This method is normally used to examine wage gaps in agricultural productivity, leaders and policy-makers have lacked crucial labour economics, but here it has been used to gain new insights into gender information regarding the size of the gender gap, its causes and its differences in agricultural productivity. The analysis establishes the key issues that differences across regions and contexts. The evidence presented in this contribute to the gap in each country, pointing towards policy solutions to address section, drawn from across a large swathe of the African continent, provides that the relevant issues and reduce the gap. Most importantly, the method separates the missing data. This section marshals new evidence on gender productivity gaps in factors contributing to the gender gap into two groups of differences between men agriculture from six countries – Ethiopia, Malawi, Niger, Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda and women: 1) quantity (or levels) of resources (e.g. hours of farm labour); and 2) – which together account for more than 40% of sub-Saharan Africa’s population. The returns to those resources (e.g. how much is produced per hectare by one hour of analysis presented here allows for a comprehensive understanding of the challenges farm labour). Given the diversity of data sources employed in the country profiles and that women farmers face – within their families, within their villages and across factors that are relevant to the gender gap for each case, the methodology varies countries – so that policy-makers, practitioners and development partners can somewhat across the six countries. Further details about these differences can be identify priorities for policy action. Box 1 provides additional background on the use of found in Appendix 1. the terms “female farmer” and “female manager” and how they are used throughout this report. Measuring the Gender Gap in Productivity Prior attempts to understand the gender gap in agriculture across sub-Saharan In this report, agricultural productivity is defined as the average value of agricultural Africa have almost all relied on data from small-scale surveys that were not output produced per hectare or acre of land (see Box 4). Productivity differences were nationally representative.1 When analysis has relied on national data, datasets have measured either at the plot level or added up to the individual farmer level within each lacked detailed information on individual and household activities and resources country. The results from these surveys show that substantial gender productivity linked to individual farm plots, which is critical for a rigorous analysis of gender gaps exist within each of the six countries. Figure 1 illustrates the extent of these productivity gaps.2 gaps. A simple comparison of average male and female productivity shows that statistically significant gaps range from a low of 13% in Uganda to a high of 25% in The analysis presented in these six country case studies overcomes many of these Malawi (the gaps in Tanzania and northern Nigeria are statistically insignificant in this shortcomings, thanks to the availability of new data and new methods of analysis. simple comparison). This suggests that in Malawi, for instance, male-managed plots These country profiles explore new data obtained through the World Bank’s Living produce on average 25% more per hectare than female-managed plots. A more Standards Measurement Study – Integrated Surveys on Agriculture (LSMS-ISA), refined measure of these gaps, which takes into account other key influences on which is a multi-country survey programme aimed at improving household and productivity, reveals a starker picture. When plot size and geographic factors are held agricultural statistics in sub-Saharan Africa (see Box 2). constant – i.e. when comparing women and men with similar-sized plots in a similar context – substantially larger gender productivity gaps are revealed. After accounting In order to pinpoint the factors that drive the gender gap in agricultural productivity, for these differences, the gender gaps range from 23% in Tanzania to a dramatic 66% data is analysed through the novel application of a method known as Oaxaca-Blinder in Niger. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 15 Figure 1: Gender Gaps in Agricultural Productivity, by Country Simple Difference Difference after Accounting for Plot Size and Regions Ethiopia 23% *** Ethiopia 24% *** Malawi 25%*** Malawi 25%*** Niger 19%*** Niger 66%*** North 4% North 46%*** Nigeria Nigeria South 24%* South 17% Tanzania 6% Tanzania 23%*** Uganda 13%*** Uganda 33%*** 0 10 20 30 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Note: The symbols */**/*** denote statistical significance at the 10%, 5% and 1% levels respectively. After accounting for the influence on productivity of farm plot size, the larger gender range of agricultural practices and agro-climactic contexts, each with its own gaps in the second set of estimates are striking. These estimates show that, in most opportunities and challenges. Each profile introduces the country context and cases, if women had plots of a similar size to those held by men, the productivity gap defines the factors contributing to the gender gap (in terms of both levels of would be much larger. Researchers have found that there is a well established inverse resources and returns), and offers policy priorities for that country based on the key relationship between plot size and productivity.4 In other words, farm yields tend to go factors that substantially account for the gender gap. The summary that closes this down as farm sizes increase. As women in Africa tend to farm smaller tracts of land section identifies the principal gender productivity constraints that emerge from the compared with men, this effect may hide how large the productivity gap would data analysis, assesses the relative importance of other factors that fall outside the otherwise be. It is important to keep this point in mind when examining male/female realm of these analyses and reviews overarching themes to guide policy action. comparisons of productivity; this pattern holds across a range of contexts.5 In Part 2: Policy Priorities offers specific policy guidance to address the priority areas particular, the differing results from Niger, northern Nigeria and Tanzania illustrate the identified in Part 1. influence of plot size on productivity estimates. The remainder of this section (Part 1: Country Profiles) explores the specific drivers of these gaps in each of the six selected countries. The six country profiles reflect a wide Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 16 Box 1: Who is a woman farmer? In order to maximise crop production, various members of a household decisions may include how to prepare land, sow crops, weed, harvest, process contribute time and energy to carry out everyday farming activities. Men, produce or sell a surplus. Furthermore, the report uses the terms “women women, boys and girls may all work on the farm. On average, 39% of women in farmers”, “female farmers” and “female plot managers” interchangeably. The the six profiled countries provide labour (as reported by the farm manager) for analysis relies on national-level datasets and the precise definition of these household agricultural production.6 terms varies somewhat across the countries covered. In the country profiles, the definition can indicate an individual within a given household who is Most prior research has examined only the household’s or head of household’s responsible for the management of and decision-making about agricultural agricultural production, inherently assuming that all household members have land; who currently farms a given plot; who makes decisions concerning what similar access to inputs and use them at the same level of effectiveness, with crops to plant, which inputs to use and when to conduct farm activities; who matching levels of productivity.7 Yet in many African countries, men and decides which crops to plant on the plot; or who is reported to control output women manage their own plots. It is therefore possible and informative to look from the crops planted on that plot. Each country profile contains a footnote at specific plot managers and to determine how levels of agricultural with detailed information on the precise definition employed in that context. productivity differ between women and men.8 Appendix 2 provides further information on the proportion of women farmers as compared with the sex of the household head, across each of the six This report defines women farmers as women who have decision-making profiled countries. power over an arable plot (or plots) of land and/or the resulting harvest. These Box 2: Living Standards Measurement Study – Integrated Surveys on Agriculture (LSMS-ISA)9 Implemented by the Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) team disaggregated at the individual and farm plot levels, enabling analysis of a within the World Bank, the LSMS-ISA project works with national statistics wide variety of issues from a gendered perspective. Furthermore, all ISA offices to produce high-quality data in eight countries across Africa, six of surveys have a panel component, which means that in order to understand which currently have available data that is presented in the following pages.10 changes over time, each household is visited at least twice. The LSMS-ISA All ISA data is nationally representative and addresses multiple survey topics, project also conducts methodological research to improve data quality, allowing for rich, detailed analysis of the linkages between welfare, agriculture disseminating best practices through training, guidebooks, courses and and income diversification in sub-Saharan Africa. The ISA data is also technical assistance. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 17 Box 3: Oaxaca-Blinder Decomposition The Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition method allows for the breakdown of given amount of a factor of production – i.e. the difference in agricultural the gender gap into two main components: The endowment effect and the output per hectare or acre that men obtain compared with women who have structural effect. The endowment effect refers to the portion of the gender the same number of years of education, or who use the same amount of gap that is a result of differences between men and women in terms of fertiliser. Even when men and women have access to the same quantities of factors of production such as age, years of education, amount of fertiliser resources, they may not achieve the same results. A noticeable difference in used, use of farm technologies and so on. Simply put, it refers to the returns to resources points towards differences in the treatment of men as differences in the quantities or levels of resources used in agriculture by compared with women within formal and informal societal institutions, men compared with women. Most significantly for policy, the portion of the markets, social programmes, etc.11 As a result, providing women with more gender gap attributable to the quantity or levels of resources can be resources will not necessarily reduce this structural effect portion of the reduced by ensuring that women receive the resources that they lack gender gap. Instead, policies need to address broader issues of disadvantage relative to men. This increased provision could be in the form of more (including factors such as discrimination and agricultural extension services education, more fertiliser or more farm labour, for instance. that focus on male crops) faced by women in the agricultural sector. Meanwhile, the structural effect captures the returns to resources. This Appendix 5 provides further technical details on this methodology. portion of the gender gap results from differences in what is obtained from a Box 4: How Have We Measured Agricultural Productivity? Agricultural productivity is defined in this report as the average value of maize. Specifically, the analysis uses the total value of agricultural output per agricultural output produced per unit of land. Individuals within each unit of land, where the quantity of agricultural output is measured by farmers’ household are assigned to each plot to allow for a comparison of gender estimates (whether they consume this output, sell it, etc.). Values are drawn productivity. For example, a man who farms a one-hectare plot in Malawi that from local and regional sales price information to allow for comparability, and produces 50,000 kwacha worth of maize is relatively more productive than a land area is measured either by GPS devices or by farmers’ own estimates, woman who farms a one-hectare plot that produces 40,000 kwacha worth of depending on the dataset. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 18 Women fetching water from a well in Goueze, Niger. Levelling the field: Improving Zezza / World Bankfor Women Farmers in Africa Opportunities Photo: Alberto 19 ethiopia SUMMARY Female farm managersiin Ethiopia produce 23% less (in terms of gross value of output) per hectare than male managers on average. Women farmers have a smaller pool of household labour available, spend less time on agricultural activities and are less likely to cultivate a rented plot than men, all of which contribute to the gender gap. Furthermore, women see lower returns to their time spent on agricultural activities, extension services received and use of fertiliser and oxen. Policy interventions aimed at bridging the gender gap should promote women’s use of labour-saving technologies on their farms, provide better tailored advice on input use and take into account household responsibilities. INTRODUCTION Improvements in the agriculture sector hold enormous promise for reducing poverty retains ownership of all the country’s land, regulating transfers and rentals. in Ethiopia, Africa’s second most populous country. The sector accounts for nearly Government policies have striven to expand the provision of agricultural extension half of Ethiopia’s GDP.1 Furthermore, more than three-quarters of the country’s and credit services to farmers. Despite this progress, a gap between female and male population reside in rural areas, where the poverty rate stands at 30%. Smallholder farmers remains. Enhancing female farmers’ contribution to the agricultural sector farmers cultivate 96% of Ethiopia’s agricultural land, primarily producing subsistence could yield pay-offs for rural households and the entire Ethiopian economy. cereal crops. The government plays a central role in seed and fertiliser markets and Measuring the Gender Gap in Agriculture This profile is based on research by Aguilar et al., who examine the magnitude of the Ethiopia Central Statistical Agency as part of the LSMS-ISA initiative, form the Ethiopia’s gender gap in agricultural productivity and the factors that contribute to it.2 basis of their study. The analysis sample comprises 1,518 farm managers, of whom Data from the 2011–12 Ethiopia Rural Socioeconomic Survey (ERSS), conducted by approximately 16% are women. i “Farm manager” refers here to an individual within a given household who is responsible for the management of and decision-making about agricultural land. The authors conducted their analysis at the level of the individual farm manager. Nearly all farm managers in the sample (99% of males and 95% of females) also serve as head of their respective households. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 20 Accounting for Ethiopia’s Gender Gap On average, female farm managers in Ethiopia produce 23% less per hectare than by a woman on her own farm activities does not yield as large a pay-off – in terms their male counterparts.ii This gap grows to 26% among farm managers at median of increased productivity – as an hour spent by a man. productivity levels (those at the 50th percentile), and narrows to 11.8%iii among the least productive farmers (at the 10th percentile). Ethiopia’s female farmers face • Quality and size of land: Women face challenges in obtaining the right multiple challenges that hinder their productivity: Differences in both the levels of agricultural land to boost their productivity. They are less likely than men to rent productive factors used and the returns that these factors generate drive the their farmland from someone else, a tendency that explains 20% of the overall country’s gender gap to a substantial degree. Further details on these key differences gender gap. Land rentals may allow farmers to gain access to better quality land include the following: than they might own. An alternative explanation for this finding is that the most productive farmers (men in this case) are also more likely to rent land. Differences • Availability of household farm labour: Ethiopia’s female farm managers live in in returns to the number of fields managed and the distance between plots and households with 1.7 fewer members on average than male farm managers. This the household further reduce women’s productivity relative to men’s. difference widens the gender gap in agricultural productivity considerably, explaining nearly a quarter (23%) of the overall gap. This finding suggests that • Returns from the use of farm inputs: Women see smaller improvements to female farmers would benefit from a deeper reservoir of household farm labour yields than men even when they apply the same amount of fertiliser and use oxen (particularly adult male labour), boosting their production levels. on their farms. Several reasons could account for this result, such as differences in knowledge of appropriate farming techniques or proper timing of use. • Competing household responsibilities: Women often hold primary responsibility for household duties, including caring for children. These obligations • Knowledge of improved farming practices: While receiving agricultural mean that female farmers have less flexibility to determine the timing and extension services does not contribute to the gender gap, these services generate duration of their farm activities. Indeed, female farm managers in Ethiopia spend better relative returns for male farm managers. This result suggests that women almost nine hours fewer per week on their own agricultural work than males, and may receive less effective extension advice or guidance that is not tailored to their this disparity accounts for 13% of the overall gender gap. Moreover, an hour spent specific needs. Policy Priorities Future agricultural policy interventions should consider the following gender-related issues in order to reduce poverty and achieve inclusive agricultural growth in Ethiopia: Promote labour-saving technologies for women: Tools, equipment and machinery that reduce the amount of farm labour required could benefit female farmers. Policies that expand the labour pool available to women farmers should also be pursued. Provide relevant information to female farmers: Extension agents and other sources of agricultural advice should better customise their information to the needs of female farmers. In particular, women could benefit from information on the appropriate use of key agricultural inputs such as fertiliser. Ease the time burden of household responsibilities: Providing services to reduce the time that female farmers need to perform household duties could enable them to devote more time to productive farm activities. ii This estimate does not account for gender differences in land size. In Ethiopia, as the size of the farm increases, its productivity decreases, a trend observed across many developing contexts (see the Country Profiles introduction for more details). Because women farm smaller plots than men, this difference narrows the gender gap in yields. iii This difference is no longer statistically significant, potentially due to the small sample size of female farm managers at the decile level (which is also the case for Niger and Tanzania). Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 21 malawi SUMMARY On average, plots managed by womeni produce 25% less (in terms of gross value of output) per hectare than plots managed by men. Women use lower levels of agricultural inputs – including improved seeds, inorganic fertiliser and extension services – on their plots compared with men. This disparity accounts for more than 80% of Malawi’s gender gap in agricultural productivity. Differences in the quality of these inputs and the returns they yield drive the remainder of the gap. Policy interventions aimed at alleviating the gender gap should focus on ensuring equal access to and use of agricultural inputs, and should take into consideration women’s child-care responsibilities. INTRODUCTION Malawi, with its predominantly rural population of nearly 16 million, relies heavily on all of these households grow maize, the country’s main staple crop. Most farming smallholder agriculture to achieve food security and foster economic growth. The households practise subsistence agriculture, with fewer than half of all farming agriculture sector accounts for 31% of GDP, although weather variations, declining soil households selling what they produce. Poverty thus remains a critical issue, and it fertility and limited use of improved inputs and farming practices have undermined disproportionately affects female-headed households. As of 2011, 49% of all male- the sector’s productivity over the past two decades.1 Agriculture also serves as a chief headed households were estimated to be below the national poverty line, compared source of livelihoods: 84% of Malawian households own or cultivate land, and virtually with 57% of households headed by females.2 Measuring the Gender Gap in Agriculture This profile is based on research by Kilic et al., who endeavour to assess Malawi’s Statistical Office with support from the LSMS-ISA initiative. The IHS3 data covers gender gap in agricultural productivity and to account for any differences observed 12,271 households. The sample is composed of 16,372 plots, of which 26% are across female- and male-managed plots.4 The analysis draws upon data from the managed by women. Third Integrated Household Survey (IHS3) 2010–11 collected by the Malawi National i The authors define a plot manager as the individual within a household who makes decisions concerning what crops to plant, which inputs to use and when to conduct farm activities on a given plot. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 22 Accounting for malawi’s Gender Gap On average, plots managed by women produce 25% less per hectare than plots fertiliser as women, suggesting that women may use inferior quality fertiliser, managed by men. This gap ranges from 22% among less productive farmers (at the apply this input incorrectly or use it at the wrong time. 10th percentile) to 37% among highly productive farmers (at the 90th percentile). Several factors contribute to this difference: • Efficiency of farm labour: Using household adult male labour generates greater returns for male-managed plots compared with female-managed plots. This • Quantity of farm inputs: Women use lower levels of agricultural inputs, including finding suggests that men may work harder or more efficiently on plots managed improved seeds,3 inorganic fertiliser and extension services, on their plots by other men. compared with men. Overall, this disparity accounts for more than 80% of the gender gap in agricultural productivity. It fully accounts for the gender gap among • Burden of child-care: Child-care responsibilities fall primarily to women, and are Malawi’s least efficient farmers, those in the bottom 30% in terms of agricultural likely to restrict their ability to supervise farm labour and reduce the productivity of productivity. Ensuring that women use similar amounts of complementary inputs their plots. Indeed, having a larger share of children in the household significantly to men could therefore narrow the overall gender gap to only 4.5% and entirely reduces the productivity of female-managed plots but does not affect male- eliminate the gap among the least productive farmers. managed plots. • Quality of fertiliser application: While differences in the quantities of farm • Export crop cultivation: Men are more likely to cultivate export crops. Among the inputs account for the majority of the productivity gap, differences in the quality of most productive farmers, this difference in the share of land under export crop these inputs and the returns they provide also matter. Men see larger cultivation (mainly tobacco and cotton) drives the gender gap, accounting for improvements in yield, even when they apply the same amounts of inorganic more than half of the difference in agricultural productivity. Policy Priorities Future agricultural policy interventions should consider the following gender-related issues in order to reduce poverty and achieve inclusive agricultural growth in Malawi: Ensure that female farmers access and use the same amount of key productive inputs as male farmers: Ensuring that Malawi’s female farmers apply similar quantities of agricultural inputs including inorganic fertiliser, pesticides and herbicides, and are growing improved and export crop varieties, could reduce the average gender gap by more than 50%. Take into consideration women’s child-care and other household responsibilities: Policies that enable women to devote a greater proportion of their time to managing their farms could further boost their agricultural productivity. Encourage productive female farmers to engage in export agriculture: Supporting highly productive female farmers to cultivate export crops could narrow the gender gap. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 23 niger SUMMARY In Niger, plots managed by womeni produce 19% less (in terms of gross value of output) per hectare than plots managed by men, on average. Men’s greater use of, and returns to, adult male labour explain the largest portion of Niger’s gender yield gap. Men also use greater quantities of fertiliser and are more likely to own land, further widening the gap. Differences in returns to organic fertiliser, land and the proportion of children in the household also contribute to the productivity difference, underscoring the importance of structural inequalities in shaping Niger’s gender gap. Policy interventions aimed at redressing the gender gap should focus on increasing women’s use of hired farm labour, enhancing their use of fertiliser and improving their access to and control over land. INTRODUCTION Niger, a landlocked country in West Africa with a population of more than 17 million, the country’s citizens live below the national poverty line and virtually all (94%) of faces a harsh climate with little water and frequent droughts. Although the Sahara these impoverished households reside in rural areas. Women account for desert envelops most of the country, leaving only 12% of its land arable, it relies approximately 24% of Niger’s agricultural farm labour, a figure well below that of the heavily on agriculture for its citizens’ food security and livelihoods. Crop and livestock other countries covered in this report.1 Women have sole ownership of only 9% of the production accounted for 40% of Niger’s GDP between 2004 and 2011, and more than total land area controlled or accessed by Niger’s households, compared with 62% 60% of rural household income derives from the agricultural sector. Yet the sector is ownership by men.2 Increasing women’s contributions to Niger’s agricultural sector characterised by very low levels of farm input use and low productivity. Nearly half of could help rural households lift themselves out of poverty. Measuring the Gender Gap in Agriculture This profile is based on research by Backiny-Yetna and McGee, and analyses Niger’s managed by men and women in these households. Roughly 40% of the plots in the gender gap in agricultural productivity using data from the 2011 Enquête Nationale sur sample were reported as being collectively managed by the household; in these les Conditions de Vie des Ménages et l’Agriculture (ECVMA), collected by Niger’s instances, the authors assign the head of household as the plot manager. Women Institut National de la Statistique with support from the LSMS-ISA initiative.3 The manage approximately 15% of the plots in the overall sample. ECVMA dataset covers 3,968 households. The authors examine data from 4,814 plots i The authors define a plot manager as the individual within a household who makes decisions concerning what crops to plant, which inputs to use and when to conduct farm activities on a given plot. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 24 Accounting for Niger’s Gender Gap On average, plots managed by women produce 19% less per hectare than plots larger boost in productivity from each unit of organic fertiliser per hectare, and this managed by men.ii The gender gap, which tends to be highest among Niger’s most difference in returns further exacerbates the difference in yields. These findings productive farmers, ranges from 4%iii among the least productive farmers (at the 10th suggest that, while overall use of farm inputs is low throughout Niger, the gender percentile) to 34% among highly productive farmers (at the 90th percentile). Several gap in the use of inputs further constrains productivity. factors contribute to Niger’s gender productivity gap: • Land ownership and characteristics: Men are more likely to report owning land • Farm labour: Women face significant challenges in accessing, using and and to enjoy higher returns to ownership than women. They also benefit from mobilising male farm labour. Men in Niger use more household adult male labour higher relative returns to an increase in land elevation, a finding that warrants on their plots than women do, and this imbalance largely drives the country’s further research. These differences all widen the male/female yield gap and gender gap. Women also receive less in terms of productivity returns from a day underline important gender disparities in tenure security and land attributes per hectare of a man’s labour than men do, and the addition of an extra male or in Niger. female adult in the household lifts men’s productivity more than it does women’s. Resorting to hired farm labour only compounds these inequalities, with men • Child-care responsibilities: An increase in the proportion of children in the enjoying higher relative returns from hiring community labour and using non- household is correlated with higher returns for men relative to women. This finding family labour more intensively. may well be linked to women’s larger role in child-care and household responsibilities, which is likely to restrict their ability to supervise farm labour and • Quantity and quality of fertiliser use: Men use more organic and inorganic thus reduces the productivity of their plots. fertiliser per hectare than women, which widens the gender gap. Men also derive a Policy Priorities Future agricultural policy interventions should consider the following gender-related issues to reduce poverty and foster inclusive agricultural growth in Niger: Facilitate women’s access to and use of hired farm labour: Policy-makers in Niger should consider policies to address female farmers’ labour shortage, as well as options that enable women to devote a larger portion of their time to managing their plots. Increase women’s efficient use of fertiliser: Women apply less fertiliser to their plots than men, and they apply this input less effectively. Policies that increase women’s use of fertiliser and improve its application could therefore help to bridge this difference. Support women’s access to and control over land: Women need better access to land, as well as the confidence and security that their land investments will benefit themselves and their families. For these reasons, policies aimed at strengthening women’s land rights should be considered. ii The fact that women in Niger cultivate substantially smaller plots than men masks a large underlying productivity gap, as in several other countries included in this report (see the Country Profiles introduction for further details). iii This difference is not statistically significant, perhaps due to the small sample size of farmers for each decile. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 25 nigeria SUMMARY Nigeria’s size and broad socio-economic diversity highlight the need for a regional analysis of gender productivity differences. In northern Nigeria, plots managed by womeni seem to be just as productive as plots managed by men when simple averages are compared. However, between men and women there are key gender differences in quantities across many important factors of production, such as land size, fertiliser use, labour and household characteristics. After accounting for such differences, plots managed by women produce 27% less (in terms of gross value of output) per hectare than plots managed by men. In addition to differing quantities of productive factors, differences in returns to such factors are also an important component of the gender gap, suggesting that simply providing women with similar quantities of productive inputs to men’s will not fully close the gap. In southern Nigeria, when simple averages are compared, plots managed by women appear to produce substantially less (in terms of gross value of output) per hectare than plots managed by men. However, after accounting for differences in quantities of key productive factors, this gender gap is no longer statistically significant. Unlike in the north, women in the south have similar average returns to productive factors as men. The findings suggest that if women in the south had similar quantities of productive factors to men’s, they could produce just as much and the gender gap might disappear. Future policies aimed at reducing the gender gap in Nigeria should focus on increasing women’s use of farm labour, labour-saving technologies and chemical inputs, while expanding female participation in commercial agriculture and tailoring policies to regional differences in agricultural practices and institutional factors. introduction Nigeria is set to become the fourth most populous country in the world by 2025.1 half of Nigerians live below the national poverty line, and those in the agricultural Agriculture plays an important role in its economy, contributing approximately 40% of sector face even higher poverty levels.3 Numerous factors constrain women’s its GDP and engaging about 60% of the workforce.2 It plays an even larger role in the contribution to agricultural growth. As in much of sub-Saharan Africa, women in north of the country, employing 80% of households compared with approximately Nigeria have relatively limited access to productive agricultural land, inputs and 50% in the more urban, oil-producing south. Yet the sector remains mostly small- services compared with men. Reducing the gender gap in agricultural productivity scale and subsistence-based, with relatively low levels of commercialisation. Nearly thus stands to substantially reduce poverty in the country. i A manager is defined here as the individual(s) within the household who decide(s) which crop(s) to plant on the plot. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 26 Measuring the Gender Gap in Agriculture This profile is based on research by Oseni et al., who assess Nigeria’s gender gap in female-managed plots in the west of the country and in Niger and Abuja states, the agricultural productivity as well as the key contributing factors to this gap.4 They final analysis only looks at approximately 3,000 plots in the remainder of the country. employ data from the 2010–11 General Household Survey Panel (GHS-Panel), The authors further disaggregate their results by northern (North East and North conducted by the Nigeria National Bureau of Statistics with support from the Central zones) and southern (South East and South South zones) groupings to LSMS-ISA initiative. The GHS-Panel includes 2,431 agricultural households farming provide more detailed insights, given Nigeria’s varied agro-climatic zones and 4,240 plots, of which 15% are managed by women. Due to the limited number of socio-economic context. Accounting for Nigeria’s Gender Gap In northern Nigeria, plots managed by women seem to be on average just as • Engagement in commercial agriculture: Women’s cultivation of cash crops productive as plots managed by men when simple averages are compared, due in and use of purchased seed narrow the gender gap in terms of returns, meaning part to differences in land size. Women in the north manage plots that are nearly half that female farmers enjoy higher productivity increases from these activities the size of men’s. As the size of the farm increases, its productivity decreases (see relative to men. Encouraging female farmers to cultivate higher-value crops could the Country Profiles introduction for further details). This difference therefore masks help them leverage this advantage to bridge the gender productivity gap. the stark gender gaps in agricultural yields in the north of the country. In other words, the female/male gap would be much larger if women in the north had similar-sized • Age: Older women face lower returns, suggesting that women, including widows, plots to men. Indeed, after controlling for manager, land holdings, input use and face disadvantages in agricultural production as they age. household characteristics, on average plots managed by women produce 27% less per hectare than plots managed by men, underscoring the importance not just of In the south of the country, women achieve similar returns from productive factors to quantities but also of returns to productive factors for the gender gap in the north. those of men on average, implying that differences in female/male productivity would disappear if women could draw on equal quantities of key inputs. Factors influencing • Quantity and efficiency of farm labour: Men in the north tend to live in the gender gap in the south include: households that have more adult labour available and tend to hire more outside labour to meet their agricultural needs. Differences in the number of adult males • Availability of farm labour: Male farmers in the south, like their northern in the household and the intensity of hired male labour use (measured by days per counterparts, deploy more labour on their plots. Differences in the amount of male hectare) account for a large portion of the total gap. Meanwhile, having an extra household labour used per hectare explain much of the gap in the south. female adult in the household generates lower returns for female-managed plots relative to male-managed plots. This finding suggests that women may work less • Herbicide use: Women use less herbicide per hectare compared with men, and efficiently on plots managed by other women. this imbalance further widens the gender productivity gap in the south. • Intensity of fertiliser use: Female farmers tend to apply less fertiliser per hectare • Household structure: Men receive a larger relative boost to productivity from than men, and this difference represents a substantial proportion of the overall having additional children in their household. This observed difference in returns gap. Closing this disparity in input use could reduce the north’s gender suggests that men are better able to mobilise younger household members for productivity gap. agricultural work. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 27 Policy Priorities Future agricultural policy interventions should focus on the following gender-related issues in order to reduce poverty and achieve inclusive agricultural growth in Nigeria: Help women overcome their labour disadvantages: Facilitating women’s use of farm labour and labour-saving approaches could narrow the male/female farming gap throughout the country. Improve women’s use of fertiliser and herbicides: Ensuring equal application of key chemical inputs could reduce the gender gap in both the south (herbicides) and the north (fertiliser). Moreover, the increased use of herbicides in the south could yield complementary benefits, as it may reduce the labour that women need for weeding. Expand female participation in commercial agriculture: Women in the north benefit more than men, in terms of returns, from cultivating cash crops and using purchased seeds. Policies aimed at encouraging and supporting female participation in high-value agriculture could therefore boost women’s agricultural production and narrow the productivity gap. Tailor policies to regional differences: In the south, policies should focus on ensuring that women access and use similar quantities of inputs, including labour and herbicides, to men. Meanwhile, policies targeting female farmers in the north should also take into account the structural disadvantages that prevent women and their households from fully benefiting from agricultural production. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 28 A Tanzanian farmer (woman on the left) learned about soil irrigation, crop multiplication, and selling crops from a local agricultural program, and she now uses her skills to lead her community’s farming group. Photo: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 29 tanzania SUMMARY In Tanzania, plots managed by womeni are on average just as productive as plots managed by men. Yet after accounting for key components such as manager, farm and household characteristics, a clear gender gap emerges: Plots managed solely by women produce on average 14% less (in terms of gross value of output) per acre than plots managed solely by men or jointly by other family members. An inadequate supply of farm labour, particularly adult male labour, and lower returns from labour inputs constrain the productivity of Tanzania’s female plot managers above all other factors. In addition, lower returns to the use of pesticides and organic fertiliser further dampen female productivity and widen Tanzania’s gender yield gap. Policies that expand women’s supply of hired labour and others that enable them to devote a greater proportion of their time to farm activities should be considered to bridge the productivity divide. These policies could be accompanied by better information on complementary input use and tailored regional interventions. INTRODUCTION Despite its steady economic growth over the past decade, Tanzania continues to sector, contributing 53% of the labour for smallholder crop production.2 Yet female struggle with reducing poverty. The national poverty rate stood at 28% in 2012.1 farmers, who tend to be less educated, less likely to be married and more likely to live Poverty in rural areas, where 80% of the country’s poor reside, remains particularly in a small household, face multiple barriers that hinder their contributions to rural intractable. The government’s “Kilimo Kwanza” (“Agriculture First”) programme and economic growth. Understanding the extent of the gender gap in agricultural similar initiatives aim to modernise the country’s agricultural sector and help rural productivity could thus help to improve the lives of the poorest segments of households escape poverty. Tanzanian women play a central role in the agricultural Tanzania’s population. Measuring the Gender Gap in Agriculture This profile is based on research by Slavchevska, and uses data from the first two from the LSMS-ISA initiative, includes a total of 6,954 plots farmed by 2,182 rounds of the Tanzania National Panel Survey (NPS), conducted in 2008/09 and agricultural households, 71% of which cultivated plots in both years. Women solely 2010/11, to explore the impact of gender on agricultural productivity.3 The analysis of manage 21% of Tanzania’s plots and men solely manage 29%, while multiple the NPS data, collected by the Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics with support household members jointly manage the remaining 50%. i A manager is defined here as the individual(s) within the household who decide(s) which crop(s) to plant on the plot. Up to three household members could be identified as plot managers in the survey. The author consequently distinguishes between plots managed by a sole female and those managed by a sole male or jointly by multiple household members. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 30 Accounting for tanzania’s Gender Gap Across Tanzania, plots managed by women are on the whole just as productive as yields. One day of labour from a male family member or a hired labourer also plots managed by men, though this result is due primarily to differences in land size. generates a higher increase in yields for male- and jointly managed plots As in other countries in Africa, women in Tanzania farm substantially smaller plots compared with female-managed plots, suggesting that these labourers do not than men, and this difference narrows the gender gap in productivity (see the Country work as efficiently on women’s plots. Profiles introduction for further details). For this reason, after accounting for differences in farm size as well as manager and household characteristics, inputs and • Quality of fertiliser and pesticide application: Male and joint managers receive crop choice, a large and significant gender gap in yields emerges: Plots solely higher returns from the use of organic fertiliser and the use of pesticides than managed by women produce on average 14% less per acre than plots managed solely female managers. Gender differences in knowledge relating to timing and by men or by other family members.ii This gap varies from 6.8%iii among highly appropriate use of these productive inputs, or even in the quality of the products productive farmers (at the 90th percentile) to 8.8% among the least productive (at the themselves, may explain these differences. 10th percentile). • Regional differences: The average national gap in productivity masks The following factors contribute to Tanzania’s gender gap: substantial regional differences. Indeed, Tanzania’s more arid and food-insecure regions tend to have the largest gender gaps in yields. Individual female • Quantity and efficiency of adult male labour: Households with male- and managers in the less fertile central and eastern zones of the country jointly managed plots have nearly twice as many adult men as those with female consistently produce less per acre than males or joint managers, with average managers, and this imbalance drives a large portion of Tanzania’s gender gaps of 26% in the central zone and 51% in the eastern zone. In the southern productivity gap. The availability, use and intensity (in terms of the number of days “breadbasket” portion of the country, meanwhile, men and women farm at worked per acre) of male farm labour all widen the male/female difference in similar levels of productivity. Policy Priorities Future agricultural policy interventions should consider the following gender-related issues to reduce poverty and foster inclusive agricultural growth in Tanzania: Expand women’s access to and use of hired labour and labour-saving tools: Female farmers in Tanzania must overcome their critical shortage of farm labour before their productive potential can be realised. Policies that enable women to hire labour, reduce the amount of labour they require, or allow them to devote a greater share of their own time to productive farm work should be explored to bridge the agricultural productivity divide. Improve women’s use of complementary inputs: Differences in returns to productive inputs, including fertiliser and pesticides, explain most of Tanzania’s gender gap. While providing women with complementary inputs will not fully close the gap in yields, equipping them with information on their proper use and application should be a consideration for policy-makers. Develop targeted regional policies: The central zone of Tanzania has the lowest farm yields and, along with the eastern zone, the largest gender productivity gaps, heightening the need for targeted agricultural interventions that address the constraints particular to those areas. ii When comparing plots solely managed by females and those solely managed by males using the same set of controls, the gender productivity gap stands at 16%. iii This gap is statistically insignificant, perhaps due to the small sample size of farmers for each decile. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 31 uganda SUMMARY Plots managed by womeni produce 13% less (in terms of gross value of output) per acre on average than plots managed by men or jointly by other family members in Uganda. Relative to men, women’s lower levels of schooling, access to extension services and application of non-labour inputs on their plots, including pesticides and organic fertiliser, widen the gender gap. Policies aimed at targeting the provision of technical information to women, securing equal access to and use of non-labour inputs, and supporting women’s education and training will help to alleviate gender inequality in the sector and enhance productivity. INTRODUCTION Most of Uganda’s 36 million inhabitants1 reside in rural areas and depend on the that rely on women’s and men’s farm outputs for sustenance. Indeed, women play a agricultural sector, which serves as the primary source of livelihoods for 73% of the vital role in Uganda’s rural agricultural sector and contribute the highest female share labour force. The country has made impressive strides in poverty reduction, with 22% of crop labour (56%) of any of the six countries analysed in this report.3 Increasing the of the population living below the national poverty line in 2012–13 compared with 31% productivity of all rural Ugandans will be central to any efforts to accelerate the in 2005–06.2 Nevertheless, poverty remains concentrated among rural households country’s progress on reducing poverty. Measuring the Gender Gap in Agriculture This profile is based on research by Ali et al., who examine the role of gender in 2009/10 and 2010/11, implemented by the Uganda Bureau of Statistics with determining Uganda’s agricultural productivity.5 To do this, the authors use panel support from the LSMS-ISA initiative. The sample includes 14,192 plots,ii of which data from the multi-topic Uganda National Panel Survey (UNPS) rounds for 48% are female-managed. i The authors define a plot manager as the individual within the household who is reported to control output from the crops planted on that plot. In the case of intercropped plots, if all the crop output is controlled by female household members, the plot is defined as female-managed. If all or part of the output is controlled by male managers, the plot is considered to be male- or jointly managed. ii The plot sample is drawn from households in which there is variation in the gender of the plot manager either between or within years, and in which there is at least one plot observation within each year. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 32 Accounting for Uganda’s Gender Gap On average, in Uganda plots managed by women produce 13% less per acre than and timing and location of activities, and hence that women could benefit more plots managed by men or jointly by other family members. The gap is driven from information and services that respond to their own needs. primarily by differences in the returns that men and women receive from productive factors, more so than the levels of these factors, suggesting that women face • Availability and use of farm labour: Uganda’s male plot managers tend to live in disadvantages in multiple socio-economic realms. The following factors drive households with more adults and thus can draw upon a larger pool of farm Uganda’s gender gap: labourers, giving them an advantage in terms of resources. Male-managed plots use greater amounts of hired labour, exacerbating the gender gap in agricultural • Level and quality of education: Female plot managers complete on average 1.9 productivity. Household labour, on the other hand, affects the gender gap in a fewer years of schooling than male managers, and this difference explains a more nuanced way: While women use a higher quantity of household labour than significant portion of the gender gap. Men also benefit from greater relative men, helping to close the gender gap, their lower relative returns to this resource returns to education than women; each additional year of schooling boosts male widen the gap. This finding indicates that, while women can command household agricultural productivity more than it increases that of women. labour, they are not getting as much out of these workers as are men. • Effectiveness of extension services and technical information: Female plot • Access to and use of non-labour inputs: Overall, the use of many non-labour managers are less likely to receive extension advice from Uganda’s National inputs is low for both men and women in Uganda. Yet plots managed by men or Agricultural Advisory Services (NAADS), which contributes to the gender gap. jointly with other family members are still nearly twice as likely to use pesticides Compounding this effect, the returns to extension services are higher for plots and organic fertiliser as plots managed by women. This imbalance increases the managed by men or jointly with other family members relative to those gender productivity gap. Ensuring that women apply appropriate quantities of managed by women. These differences may signify that Uganda’s extension non-labour inputs could both reduce the productivity gap and increase the supply services are more attuned to male farmers’ demands in terms of crop choices of food available for Ugandan households. Policy Priorities Future agricultural policy interventions in Uganda should consider the following policy priorities in order to decrease poverty further and achieve inclusive agricultural growth: Re-examine the extension services model: The current extension services model in Uganda could be strengthened to better address women’s information needs and skills. Experimenting with different delivery approaches should be encouraged. A farmer field school model, for instance, has already shown some promise in boosting women’s productivity.4 Implementing a targeted capacity-building approach that is better attuned to female farmers’ lower education levels may also help. Invest in adult education for women: While Uganda has already achieved gender parity in national primary and secondary school enrolment, the effects of previous gender gaps in schooling persist. Investments in literacy and adult learning for female farmers may yield tangible benefits for their productivity. Expand women’s use of improved inputs: Women’s lower levels of use of pesticide and organic fertiliser limit their productivity relative to men’s. Policy-makers should consider improving all farmers’ access to these inputs, with a focus on helping women overcome the specific barriers that currently limit their use of inputs. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 33 Summing It Up: Key Drivers of the Gender Gap The six countries profiled in this report present clear evidence that the widowhood, divorce or migration of husbands. Consequently, women disadvantages faced by women farmers in Africa result in a profound gender gap. farmers across Ethiopia, Malawi, northern Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda Female farmers across these diverse African countries, including some of the have fewer household members to provide labour on the farm or support in continent’s leading agricultural producers, are consistently less productive on the home. Female farmers in Malawi, Niger, southern Nigeria and Tanzania average than their male counterparts, by a range of 13% in Uganda to 25% in also deploy fewer household male labourers on their plots. In all these Malawi. Although the factors accounting for these gaps vary by country, this report countries, except Nigeria, these male labourers generate lower returns for reveals several key drivers of the gender gap that are evident across countries and female farmers relative to male farmers. And while in Uganda women may regions. This section highlights the most important challenges. be able to mobilise household labour, they still do not receive the same returns to it as men.i These lower returns could possibly be due to women’s Other reports have documented the numerous disadvantages that women face time constraints (relating to their roles as care-givers), which could affect globally, ranging from difficulties in obtaining credit to poor access to modern farming their ability to supervise their household farm labourers, or to cultural norms technologies.1 The country profiles in this report highlight the principal factors and that result in labourers working harder for male supervisors. Meanwhile, in disadvantages that matter for the productivity gap, and also those that do not matter Niger and northern Nigeria, having an additional household member for those particular countries. Table 2 provides a summary of these findings. By enhances the productivity of men more than women, possibly indicating focusing political attention and marshalling resources to tackle the specific issues men’s greater ability to control household farm labour resources. identified here, policy-makers, practitioners and development partners can begin to address gender equality and usher in greater productivity and growth. • Hired labour: Female farmers also face challenges in hiring effective outside farm labour, perhaps due to a lack of financial resources, either at In addition to the key drivers identified in the country case studies, there are other the appropriate times in the production cycle or in general. Women in important factors that may affect the gender productivity gap. While this analysis northern Nigeria and Uganda use fewer hired labourers per hectare/acre on allows for a more comprehensive view, limitations in the method, data or surveys their plots and this imbalance widens the gender gap. Meanwhile, hired mean that it cannot measure everything. Existing empirical literature often cites labour generates lower returns for female farmers compared with male three additional factors in particular – access to land, social networks and soil quality farmers in Niger and Tanzania. This suggests that women, due to other – that could play a part. After discussing the key drivers of the gender gap identified responsibilities, may be less able to adequately manage these labourers across the country profiles, this section offers a brief overview of these other factors. and/or that norms constrain women’s ability to motivate their labourers to Appendix 3 provides a fuller discussion. work as efficiently on their plots. Alternatively, women simply may not be able to afford to pay as much as men for effective farm workers. Key Drivers of the Agriculture Gender Gap in Africa • Child-care and household responsibilities: Women typically assume a Labour larger role in child-care and household responsibilities than men, and this is • Household labour: Agriculture in Africa depends heavily on manual labour likely to restrict their ability to work on their own farms or manage their from a farmer’s household, family and community. In many ways, labour is a labourers. Moreover, men tend to have greater control over how family labour key challenge to achieving equality in productivity across all of the profiled is allocated, including that of younger household members. For these countries – and the farm labour gap begins in the home. On average, female reasons, having a larger proportion of children in the household (relative to farmers tend to live in smaller households with fewer men, possibly due to adults) reduces women’s productivity more than men’s in Malawi, Niger, i The Uganda data does not differentiate between female and male household labour. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 34 southern Nigeria and Uganda. Meanwhile, female farmers in Ethiopia spend counterparts. Women in Ethiopia benefit less than men – in terms of increased less time on farm activities than males and get a lower relative return from agricultural productivity – from the extension advice that their households receive, the time that they do spend. Addressing women’s time burdens could thus suggesting that current agricultural extension programmes may be better attuned to have important implications for their farm productivity.ii the needs of male farmers. Female farmers in Malawi belong to households that receive less technical guidance on agricultural production and marketing, again contributing to the gender gap. Meanwhile, women in Uganda receive less technical Non-labour inputs guidance from the National Agricultural Advisory Services (NAADS) and also get lower Differences in the use of and returns to fertilisers, herbicides and pesticides matter returns from other sources of extension services than men, once again widening the for the gender gap. Women have unequal access to a range of productive inputs, gender gap. including fertiliser and pesticides. The country profiles also demonstrate the importance of unequal returns from those inputs. Indeed, differences in input use Land and returns contribute to the gender gap across all the countries profiled. In northern Nigeria, women use less fertiliser per hectare than men, while women in Numerous factors restrict women’s access to land, as detailed in the following southern Nigeria report using pesticides and herbicides less intensively.iii These section. But even after a woman accesses farmland, other associated challenges can differences reduce the agricultural productivity of Nigerian women, relative to men. hamper her productivity. One of these challenges relates to land size.iv In Ethiopia and In Uganda, women use lower levels of fertiliser, pesticides and herbicides than men, Tanzania, women receive lower returns than men to an extra hectare of land. This widening the country’s gender gap. In Ethiopia and Tanzania, gender differences in difference could suggest that the marginal land that women obtain may be of poorer returns to fertiliser use contribute to the gap, suggesting that female farmers in quality than men’s, among a range of other potential explanations.v Gender these countries use lower-quality fertiliser or apply it incorrectly or at the wrong differences in other land characteristics, including plot elevation and perceived time. Women in Niger and Malawi, meanwhile, face gender gaps in both domains: control over land, further reduce women’s productivity when compared with men in They use fertiliser less intensively than men and they achieve smaller productivity Ethiopia, Malawi and Niger. gains from the fertiliser they do use (relative to men’s). Increasing women’s use of improved seeds also offers potential. Female farmers in Malawi and Uganda are less Access to markets likely to use improved seeds than males, which widens the gap. Meanwhile, in northern Nigeria purchased seeds generate better returns for female farmers Enabling female farmers to shift into high-value commercial agriculture shows compared with their male counterparts. Thus expanding the use of improved and promise. In Malawi, women farmers are less likely to cultivate export crops, such as purchased seeds by women in Malawi, Uganda and northern Nigeria could narrow tobacco, than men, and this difference contributes substantially to the country’s the respective gender gaps. gender gap. Similarly, in Uganda the fact that women are less likely to grow cash crops widens the gender gap. Yet on the whole, in Malawi, northern Nigeria and Agricultural extension and information Uganda, female farmers enjoy higher returns than male farmers from switching into high-value agriculture. Policies that leverage this advantage can therefore enhance The agricultural extension services and information that female farmers access are gender equality and boost agricultural growth.vi often less beneficial for their productivity than those obtained by their male ii A woman’s reproductive role is also likely to influence her overall agricultural productivity, pointing to a possible need for complementary farm worker interventions to help pregnant women. iii Lower levels of pesticide and herbicide use also reduce women’s productivity relative to men’s in Malawi, while differences in chemical input returns widen the male/female gap in Tanzania. While women’s smaller plot sizes may narrow the observed gap in productivity (see the Country Profiles introduction), reflecting a gender difference in the quantity of land, differences in returns from land may nevertheless widen the gender iv gap. v In Niger, men receive lower returns than women from the use of female labour on their plots. These female labourers may be the spouses of the plot managers. Because these women likely lack tenure security over their husbands’ plots, they have less incentive to work hard and invest, possibly accounting for the lower observed returns. vi The country profiles for Ethiopia, Niger and Tanzania do not examine the role of cash crop agriculture in contributing to the gender gap. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 35 Human capital sub-Saharan Africa, often limiting a woman’s rights even to access and cultivate her Although countries across Africa have recently made great strides in achieving husband’s land.4 However, the introduction of formal legal systems, in combination gender parity in schooling, the gender inequalities of previous decades continue to with customary institutions, has often resulted in ambiguous and problematic have an impact on the gender productivity gap. Male/female differences in years of arrangements for women.5 For example, laws may recognise only a single owner of schooling among farmers translate into differences in agricultural productivity in land, thus failing to account for women’s informal secondary access rights under Uganda and, to a lesser degree, Malawi. customary systems.6 At the same time, family and inheritance laws can disadvantage women, making it difficult for them to claim and permanently transfer land following divorce or the death of a father or husband.7 Inequalities in formal land Additional measured factors rights also inhibit women’s tenure security, which in turn reduces agricultural Other factors play a role but are less relevant than expected in explaining the gender productivity. Empirical evidence from settings as diverse as Ethiopia, Rwanda and gap across the profiled countries. Women’s lower levels of access to non-farm Ghana has established strong links between security of land tenure and the level of income drives part of Niger’s gender gap, but not those of Ethiopia, Malawi or Nigeria. investment in that land, such as tree planting, soil conservation, leaving land fallow Women farmers tend to be older, on average, than men farmers, but age contributes and the use of hired labour.8 to the yield gap only in Tanzania, Nigeria and Uganda. Lastly, although credit and irrigation may affect women’s access to inputs and shape overall productivity, these Social networks factors do not appear to directly determine the gender gap in productivity in any of the profiled countries.vii Informal social networks play a critical role in the exchange of agricultural information and the adoption of agricultural technologies among farmers.9 Cultural norms, such Going Beyond the Survey Data: Other Factors that May Matter as restrictions on women’s interactions with men outside the household, as well as for the Gender Gap time and mobility constraints, may limit avenues for female farmers to access public extension and formal agricultural information services.10 Women’s networks tend to Evidence from the existing empirical literature points to several other factors (not differ from men’s (for one thing, they are smaller), and research suggests that women adequately captured in the country analyses due to limitations in the data, surveys may rely more heavily on them for accessing agricultural information, particularly and methodology used) that may also have an effect on the gender gap. Closer from other women.11 Interestingly, one study showed that in communities with male analysis of these factors reveals access to land and informal social networks as volunteer farm advisors disseminating information about new techniques, farmers additional priorities for policy action, with soil quality needing further research. did not significantly increase their adoption of these techniques.12 However, in Appendix 3 contains a more detailed discussion of these additional factors. communities with female volunteer farm advisors, women were more likely to adopt such techniques. Moreover, the same study found that both male and female farmers in communities that had female advisors were also more likely to teach others about Access to land and security of tenure these techniques. Access to land and security of tenure are critical for agricultural investment and the welfare of rural households, yet women are disadvantaged on both fronts. Studies Soil quality consistently show that rural women in Africa are less likely to control and own land than rural men, a pattern supported by the household data analysed in this report.3 Soil qualityviii is a major determinant of crop productivity in Africa, and it is often Deeply embedded norms and customary institutions govern land in much of rural claimed that land managed by women is of lower soil quality than that managed by vii Some factors, such as irrigation, are hardly used by either women or men and thus at present they do not contribute to the gap. viii A wide range of indicators can provide information on soil quality, but the level of soil fertility (the amount and composition of nutrients available in the soil) is perhaps the most critical for agricultural productivity. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 36 men.13 However, the high cost and the logistics of large-scale soil testing in Africa lower levels of organic matter, but that this difference does not tend to impact yields.14 limit the availability of quality data at the farm level. Due to these challenges, Small sample results from Burkina Faso and Uganda find no appreciable difference in empirical evidence of a gender gap in soil quality is scarce and inconclusive. In one soil quality between women’s and men’s plots.15 The lack of robust empirical studies study of southern Ghana, researchers found that women do farm plots with slightly highlights the need for further research to strengthen the evidence base in this area. Policy Lessons In addition to identifying the main drivers of the agricultural productivity gap between men and women, the country profiles reveal three overarching lessons that should guide policy action on narrowing this gap. First, closing Africa’s gender gap is about more than just ensuring that women farmers have equal access to key productive resources. While differences in access to land, fertiliser and other inputs remain important, differences in how a female farmer benefits from these resources (i.e. her returns to those inputs) often have a larger effect. This finding has important implications for policy-makers who seek growth dividends from greater equality. Second, farmers with different levels of productivity face distinct challenges of their own, and policy-makers should take this into account. The same policy response may not necessarily benefit both female subsistence farmers and highly productive female farmers, for instance. Third, regional differences matter. Even within the same country, the factors accounting for the gender gap may vary by region. In countries such as Nigeria or Tanzania, for example, policy-makers need to tailor their policy responses to the state or regional level. The final section of this report presents specific policy recommendations to address the key drivers of the gender gap. Woman watering her field near Liwonde National Park, Malawi. Photo: Meike Van De Sande / World BanK Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 37 Table 2: Factors that Widen the Gender Gap in Agricultural Productivity Ratio of Other Land Household Household Time Spent Children to Improved/ Pesticide/ Fertiliser Use Credit or Distance Non-Farm Land Characteris- Household Male Farm Female Farm Hired Farm on Farm Adults within Purchased Herbicide (Organic or Farm Tools & Agricultural Export/Cash Agricultural to Market Income/ Years of Wealth/ Size tics* Size Labour† Labour† Labour† Activities Household Seeds Use† Inorganic)† Irrigation Equipment Extension Crops Capital or Road Activity Age Schooling Consumption Levels of factor found to widen the gender gap Ethiopia Returns to factor found to widen gender gap Malawi Levels and returns to factor found to widen gender gap Niger Factor included in country analysis but not found to widen the gender gap Factor not incuded in country analysis N. Nigeria Note: S. Nigeria Only statistically significant factors (10% significance threshold) that widen the male-female gap reported. * Number of plots managed and plot-level slope, elevation, soil quality, ownership and documentation. † Includes both use and intensity of factor use (quantity/value per Tanzania hectare or acre). Uganda LAND labour NON-Labour inputs information access to markets age and wealth Human capital Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 38 Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 39 FPO A smallholder farmer in Uganda. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa Photo: USAID 40 part 2: Policy Priorities for Narrowing the Gender Gap in African Agriculture espite growing recognition of the disadvantages that women face in It is important to note that evidence identifying effective policies to support women agriculture, evidence from the six countries profiled in this report suggests farmers and bridge the gender gap is scarce. To the extent possible, these policy that a significant gender gap in agricultural productivity remains. Maintaining options are tailored to evidence from African countries. Furthermore, these options the status quo has real costs, in terms of missed opportunities to enhance are classified as promising or emerging depending on the rigour and quantity of equality, improve overall agricultural productivity and accelerate economic growth. evidence available. Interventions are classified as emerging if the current state of The persistent gap evident in the profiled countries underscores that a shift in evidence available is thin and/or indirect, and promising if rigorous impact evaluation thinking is long overdue. Existing agricultural policies need to become better attuned evidence exists for positive productivity impacts on women farmers.i While some of to the issues that undermine the productivity of female farmers, and new policies and these policy options, such as interventions aiming to provide better-quality non- programmes must be designed and implemented to address their particular needs. labour inputs, may benefit both women and men to varying degrees, other proposed interventions, such as better targeting of extension services, focus on improving the This section presents ten policy priorities that are informed by the main drivers of the agricultural productivity of women farmers only. Appendix 4 offers a full assessment gender gap identified in the country profiles. Each priority sets out policy options, of the policy evidence presented here. which have been identified from an interrogation of rigorous impact evaluation evidence and credible inferential research, where it exists. These options include both This section concludes by offering specific guidance to African leaders wishing to promising interventions, for which existing evidence indicates a high potential for reduce the gender gap within their agriculture sectors and by outlining the catalytic success, and emerging interventions, which may benefit from further testing. role that donors and other development organisations can play in assisting African Ultimately, which policy options individual countries adopt will depend upon the main governments in this important endeavour, including through the funding of pilot constraints that women farmers face in those countries and the relevance of that programmes that have the potential to close the gender gap and by employing option to each country context. The ten policy priorities are listed on the following sex-disaggregated data in the monitoring and evaluation of their programmes to pages, grouped according to the key drivers of the gender agricultural productivity better track impacts on women farmers. gap that they address. i Specifically, a policy is classified as promising if it has at least one impact evaluation with a plausible counterfactual that demonstrates results in the anticipated direction. A policy option is emerging if it lacks direct, rigorous evidence of impact on gender agricultural productivity outcomes. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 41 Table 1: Ten Policy Priorities for Narrowing the Gender Gap in African Agriculture Promising policy option (based on available evidence) Key Driver Policy Priority Policy Option Emerging policy option (based on available evidence) Formalise land rights through registration to increase women’s tenure security. Land 1. Strengthen women’s land rights. Expand co-titling and individual titling for women. Reform family and inheritance law to protect women’s rights. Offer women farmers financing to hire farm labour. 2. Improve women’s access to hired labour. Task agents with helping women farmers to find labour. Labour 3. Enhance women’s use of tools and equipment that reduce the Provide women farmers with financing or discounts for hiring or amount of labour they require on the farm. purchasing machinery. 4. Provide community-based child-care centres. Provide community-based child-care centres. Provide women farmers with financing or price discounts aligned with their cash flow to encourage the purchase of fertiliser. 5. Encourage women farmers to use more, and higher-quality, fertiliser. Certify small bags of fertiliser for use by women. Non-Labour Inputs Provide flexible financing for seeds. 6. Increase women’s use of improved seeds. Help women better identify and obtain good-quality seed. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 42 Promising policy option (based on available evidence) Key Driver Policy Priority Policy Option Emerging policy option (based on available evidence) Train extension agents to target female farmers and be more responsive to their agricultural information needs. 7. Tailor extension services to women’s needs, and leverage social Bring agricultural training and advice to women’s doorsteps Information networks to spread agricultural knowledge. through farmer field schools and mobile phone applications. Identify female volunteer farm advisors to spread information within women’s social networks. 8. Promote women’s cultivation of high-value/cash crops. Promote women’s cultivation of high-value/cash crops. Access to Provide market services through information and communications Markets technology (ICT). 9. Facilitate women’s access to and effective participation in markets. Channel existing groups to access market opportunities. Human Capital 10. Raise education levels of adult female farmers. Raise education levels of adult female farmers. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 43 Priority 1. Strengthen women’s land rights State of evidence: PROMISING Secure land rights enhance a woman’s incentives to invest in her farm. Indeed, evidence has shown that increasing women’s formal land rights boosts agricultural Direct evidence is available of positive impacts on agricultural investment and investments, particularly in soil and water conservation.1 Strengthening land rights productivity. may also mean that women will have to spend less time and fewer resources trying to secure their land, freeing up resources for investment elsewhere.2 Having such rights thus holds great potential for improving women’s productivity, and policy-makers Expand co-titling and individual titling for women should consider implementing the following measures. In addition to formalising land rights, policy-makers may focus on land registration for Formalise land rights through registration to increase women’s women, either jointly with their spouses or as individuals, to enhance their tenure security productivity. Co-titling of landholdings between husbands and wives offers a cost- effective way to ensure that women benefit from accompanying legal reforms.7 In Policy-makers should consider regularising land tenure through community land Tanzania, researchers encouraged co-titling by offering price discounts to land- registration, land title registration or land certification. As an illustration, an innovative, owners who wished to acquire formal land titles and agreed to accept their wives as low-cost and gender-sensitive land tenure registration programme in Rwanda (see owners or co-owners of the land.8 They assessed this initiative through a randomised Box 5) has increased agricultural investments for both women and men, with women experiment and found that these small financial incentives achieved almost increasing their investments almost twice as much as men. These impressive results complete gender parity without affecting demand for land titles, exemplifying a show how improved tenure security can lead to concrete investment pay-offs.3 The low-cost yet effective way to achieve gender equality in land ownership. Policy- reforms also helped to clarify the distribution of rights within the household – makers may also consider financial incentives to encourage individual titles in boosting the chances that a married woman would receive recognition as a co-owner women’s names, especially for single, unmarried women or female heads of of the land and that children would inherit their parents’ land. households, as they may not directly benefit from legal reforms on co-titling.9 Having formal property rights also affects women’s decisions to rent land from other Past experiences of land titling reforms in Africa and other regions have shown that community members or to community members, with implications for their own these efforts may actually harm some women if not designed carefully.10 Land productivity. Formalising rights to land for both women and men may help overcome registration programmes need to account for all the factors that determine women’s this challenge and increase women’s access to rented land. Men with formal titles may access to land and their control over it: The underlying legal framework; the be more willing to lease land to women because of the certainty that women cannot interaction between formal and customary laws; women’s understanding of their own claim rights on it.4 Furthermore, when a woman rents out a plot and does not cultivate rights; and the effective enforcement of these rights. Village-level legal aid or it directly, she risks losing it. For this reason, women are reluctant to rent land out or paralegals may provide assistance in enforcing these co-titling reforms.ii leave it fallow if their rights are not well documented or their communities do not recognise these rights. Formalising land rights facilitates and increases women’s State of evidence: PROMISING participation in the rental market.5 Therefore, for both women and men, it may help The policy has evidence of positive gendered impacts on access to and control narrow the productivity gap, while increasing tenure security and overall welfare.6 over land. ii While the evidence for land registration is promising, no rigorous evidence exists on the efficacy of local-level legal assistance. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 44 Box 5: Securing Land Tenure for Women and Men in Rwanda One of the most densely populated countries in Africa, Rwanda has dams), and this effect was twice as strong for female-headed long faced the challenge of developing a land governance system households, suggesting that tenure insecurity had acted as a that is efficient, fair and non-discriminatory. It has been argued that barrier to investment, especially for women. the failure to meet this challenge played an important role in the After participating in the LTR programme, the 76% of women 1994 genocide. The government has since made a concerted effort in the study who had a marriage certificate were more likely to to clarify land rights and overcome inequalities, setting out rules be regarded as joint land owners with their husbands. and guiding principles in its National Land Policy (2004) and Organic Land Law (2005). This process culminated in the Land The property rights of women who are not officially married Tenure Regularisation (LTR) programme, one of the first initiatives in are not protected under Rwandan law. The LTR pilot actually Africa to address tenure insecurity on a national level, with the reduced the likelihood of these women becoming ambitious goal of registering every landholder in the country. The documented owners of land. However, based on these initial LTR is innovative in its treatment of gender issues, mandating that results, the Rwandan government has developed a new policy legally married wives be recognised as co-owners in the registration aimed at strengthening the rights of women who do not have process. Piloted in 2007–08 and rolled out nationally in 2010, the official marriage certificates, and preliminary results indicate programme has demarcated and digitised 10 million plots, and has that this has greatly improved the programme’s impact. issued 6.1 million land titles. International donors have supported these efforts, notably the UK’s Department for International Recognising and supporting women’s land rights has been at the Development (DFID) and the World Bank. A recent study revealed heart of Rwanda’s remarkable reform agenda. The LTR programme some interesting and positive gender impacts: serves as an inspiring model for other countries grappling with issues of land insecurity and gender inequality. Households that register their land through the LTR were more likely to invest in it (for example, building terraces and Sources: D.A. Ali, K. Deininger and M. Goldstein. 2014. “Environmental and Gender Impacts of Land Tenure Regularization in Africa: Pilot evidence from Rwanda”. Journal of Development Economics; DFID. 2013. “Annual Review: Support for Land Tenure Regularisation Programme in Rwanda”. http://devtracker.dfid.gov.uk/projects/GB-1-200284/documents/ Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 45 Reform family and inheritance laws to protect women’s rights adolescent fertility, reduced maternal and infant mortality and improved female Policy-makers should consider reforms to family and inheritance laws which ensure educational enrolment.13 After India changed its succession law to grant daughters that women have equal rights to access, use, control and transfer productive and sons equal rights to inherit ancestral land, daughters gained more access to land resources such as land. These laws may be designed particularly to protect women’s through inheritance, thereby increasing their educational achievements and delaying rights to land in the case of divorce. Offering a prime example of this, Malawi’s marriage.14 These reforms in family and inheritance laws can increase women’s constitution stipulates that, upon the dissolution of a marriage, a woman has the right access to land, thus enhancing their agricultural investments and productivity. to a fair disposition of property held jointly with her husband.11 A study in Ethiopia However, as in the previous titling example, access to justice and enforcement are demonstrated that the country’s change in family law has increased women’s critical to the success of such reforms. participation in the workforce and other productive sectors (although impacts on agriculture are not separately identified).12 Similarly, using non-experimental evidence State of evidence: EMERGING from a dataset of women’s property rights spanning 100 countries over a period of 50 No rigorous evidence is available for agriculture in any African country, but there years, researchers found that legal reforms correlated with greater labour force are positive gender impact results to draw from other developing countries. participation among women, higher rates of women in waged employment, lower Priority 2. Improve women’s access to hired labour Offer women farmers financing to hire farm labour Due to household and child-care responsibilities, female farmers have limited time to devote to their own farm work, which undermines their productivity. Making Policy-makers should consider piloting and assessing interventions that provide matters worse, they have fewer household members on average than men to help female farmers with financing to hire outside labour for specific farm tasks, such as them on their farms, and they face difficulties in hiring additional farm labour, either planting, ploughing, weeding and harvesting. These measures may include vouchers because they lack the necessary cash to pay for it or because social norms restrict specific to hiring labour, cash transfers and credit. Many agricultural tasks must be them from hiring men to work for them. When women do hire labour, their workers conducted within specific time periods, and labour shortages often occur during generate lower returns for them compared with male farmers – perhaps because these periods. If women farmers cannot afford to hire additional labourers or cannot women’s cash constraints can lead them to hire cheaper, less productive labour. In hire labourers to complete tasks at the appropriate time, the delay may result in lower addition, these constraints may vary for female heads of household depending on productivity on their farms. Providing finance for these tasks may permit women to whether they are unmarried, divorced or widowed. Women farmers across all six access labour in a timely manner, boosting both the number of labourers they can countries profiled face these types of challenges, and in every instance these hire and their effectiveness. For example, a preliminary evaluation of cash transfers obstacles have widened the gender gap in agricultural productivity. However, given to households with children under the age of five in Zambia found that they evidence on policies aiming to help women overcome these barriers is rare. It is increased spending on hired labour in addition to other agricultural inputs, such as therefore vital that policy-makers consider piloting and evaluating policy options, seeds and fertiliser. Spending on hired labour increased to four times its value before such as the following, to identify how to enable women farmers across sub-Saharan the cash transfers were made.15 Policy-makers’ choice of financing mechanism (be it Africa to overcome such obstacles. vouchers, cash transfers or credit) may vary based on their country’s particular labour market and institutional context. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 46 State of evidence: EMERGING because cultural norms limit their ability to hire male labour. Women have already Indirect evidence is available on the impact of cash transfers on hired labour, but proved to be effective community-based providers of extension information – for no direct evidence is available on providing women with financing to hire labour. example, in Mozambique’s extension programme, where female agents were tasked with spreading knowledge of sustainable land management practices within their respective communities.16 A natural extension of this type of programme may entail Task agents with helping women farmers to find labour these agents providing support to women to hire outside labour. Policy-makers may pilot this type of programme on its own, or combine it with other extension Policy-makers could also pilot and evaluate community programmes whereby interventions. agents, both women and men, help connect women farmers to potential hired labour. This policy option may prove particularly effective for women farmers who face State of evidence: EMERGING difficulties in hiring labour because they are not easily able to leave their homes or This policy lacks any direct, rigorous, empirical evidence. Priority 3. Enhance women’s use of tools and equipment that reduce the amount of labour they require on the farm Improving women’s access to tools and machinery that reduce the amount of total pump buyers.17 This example shows that market-based approaches to on-farm labour required has the potential to reduce the productivity gap. Tools increase technology use also need to address the information and financial and machinery may also help improve women’s returns from using available constraints that women face, such as information on how to use machinery. It labour on the farm. Use of better tools and equipment may appeal to women who also shows that the design of technologies should be better attuned to women’s have limited time due to household responsibilities. Women who work on their situations, cultural appropriateness and ergonomic comfort wherever possible. In own farms but face challenges in hiring outside labour may also benefit. this case, the most effective irrigation pumps needed two people to operate them and required women to use their legs for pedalling, which is considered culturally inappropriate. Financing or discounts for hiring or purchasing machinery and Provide women farmers with financing or discounts for hiring or equipment may not need to be given to women directly, and could instead purchasing machinery incentivise service providers to offer services on female farms. In situations where Policy-makers should consider piloting the provision of vouchers, cash transfers, individuals or groups of female farmers want to purchase machinery, financing loans or discounts to women farmers so that they can hire or purchase machinery layaway purchasesiii may also prove useful, especially in easing the high upfront and equipment, and evaluate the impact of these programmes on women’s cost of buying agricultural equipment. agricultural productivity. Policy-makers may learn from previous experience when designing these pilots. For example, a programme in Kenya and Tanzania targeted State of evidence: EMERGING women to purchase pumps for irrigation but, despite the emphasis on women, a Only indirect evidence is available on the impact of using machinery. qualitative assessment of the programme noted that they constituted only 10% of iii In a layaway purchase, unlike a hire purchase or instalment agreement, the customer does not receive the item until it is fully paid for. The seller may charge a small fee for reserving the item, but no interest is charged. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 47 Priority 4. Provide community-based child-care centres Typically women care for children, and this responsibility may limit the time they 15 hours per week on their child-care responsibilities, as evidenced by a recent can devote to their own farm work and their ability to supervise farm labour. In experimental evaluation. The programme also increased the likelihood that care- several of the contexts profiled, including Malawi, Niger and southern Nigeria, the givers would work in the labour market by six percentage points.18 Similarly, a study in lack of time that women spend on the farm contributes to the gender gap in Togo found that women are more likely to work when they have fewer children to care productivity. for, and that young women are more likely to participate in the labour market if their children are enrolled in pre-school.19 Policy-makers should consider piloting community-based child-care centres to alleviate the responsibilities that women shoulder at home, and assessing the impact State of evidence: EMERGING of such centres on women’s farm work. Child-care centres have already improved Indirect but strong evidence is available for this policy; however, it pertains to labour participation for women working in other sectors. For example, a pre-school care-givers and not specifically to women farmers. enrolment programme in rural Mozambique helped care-givers, mostly mothers, save Priority 5. Encourage women farmers to use more, and higher-quality, fertiliser Despite its potential to boost production and increase profits, levels of fertiliser use Policy-makers therefore need to better understand the specific barriers that prevent remain very low in Africa,20 particularly among women.iv In 2002, farmers in sub- women farmers from using higher levels of fertiliser and earning higher returns from Saharan Africa used 8kg of fertiliser on average for every hectare of land they its application in their particular contexts, and should consider the following cultivated, which is extremely low compared with averages of over 100kg in South policy options. Asia and 78kg in Latin America.21 The evidence presented in the country profiles underscores the fact that, in many African countries, women apply even less fertiliser Provide women farmers with financing or price discounts aligned with than men to their plots. Increasing the use of fertiliser, both in terms of quantity and their cash flow to encourage the purchase of fertiliser quality, has emerged as a critical priority for narrowing the gender gap in agricultural productivity, particularly in Ethiopia, Malawi, Niger, northern Nigeria, and Uganda. Yet Policy-makers should consider providing women farmers with financing or should several distinct barriers may prevent female farmers from using fertiliser, including its leverage other price incentives, such as time-limited discounts, to encourage them to price,22 their inability to obtain credit for its purchase23 or lack of access to a market. increase their use of fertiliser. Women farmers may be less likely to use fertiliser if they iv While over-reliance on fertiliser is an important sustainability issue for soil and environmental degradation, use of fertiliser in African countries is far below the smallest possible quantity recommended for improving soil fertility, with farmers applying inorganic fertiliser far less intensively than in the rest of the world. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 48 lack information on its benefits or how to use it, cannot afford to purchase it or face Certify small fertiliser bags for use by women difficulties in conserving cash between agricultural seasons. Price incentives may provide an effective tool to overcome these problems. A randomised control trial in Policy-makers and private sector actors could pilot interventions to certify smaller Mali found that when women received free fertiliser, it increased their use of that bags of fertiliser for women farmers, and assess whether these measures improve input as well as of other complementary inputs, including herbicides and hired fertiliser use and returns. Fertiliser is typically certified and sold in large, bulk labour.24 The intervention led to an overall increase in agricultural output, but because quantities. For example, fertilisers such as urea and diammonium phosphate (DAP) spending on hired labour and herbicides increased as well, it did not lead to higher are currently sold in many West African countries in sealed and certified 50kg bags, farm profits. In other fertiliser subsidy programmes where women farmers have not which is a large quantity considering the low average levels of fertiliser use. Because been specifically targeted, evidence of impact has not been as encouraging. A recent women cultivate smaller plots of land than men on average,27 they need even smaller preliminary evaluation of Malawi’s Farm Input Subsidy Programme showed that when quantities of fertiliser for their plots. However, small bags of certified fertiliser are not cash vouchers for the use of inputs were given to poor households who owned and readily available. Women therefore often have to resort to purchasing fertiliser of cultivated land, there were no clear productivity gains on female-managed plots, uncertain or adulterated quality, which perhaps helps explain their limited use of the although the programme had positive impacts on male-managed plots.25 This type of input and their poorer returns from its application. intervention would increase women’s use of fertiliser, but would not necessarily help them to receive optimal returns from its use. For this reason, complementary Admittedly, this intervention may be costly since it would require packaging and interventions to improve information and knowledge on how to use fertiliser (through certification of smaller bags, thereby raising the unit cost.28 But many products such extension services, for example) will be needed to help women reap the full benefits. as soap and shampoo are available in small sachets in rural areas, and therefore supplying fertiliser in small bags is not unrealistic if the private sector is also brought Farmers may also face difficulties in conserving cash between the harvest season in as a partner. Moreover, fertiliser certification and regulatory systems across Africa and the planting season. A randomised evaluation in Kenya showed that small, may lack capacity to roll out this policy alone. In Mali, for example, there are no time-limited fertiliser discounts, in the form of free delivery, induced bigger increases laboratories to check for product quality prior to fertiliser being sold.29 Nevertheless, in fertiliser use than those resulting from much larger price subsidies later in the the initiative may offer promise in reducing the gender gap in contexts with strong agricultural season.26 This evaluation did not distinguish impact by gender, but if administrative and quality enforcement capabilities. Building this capacity is a women face such fluctuations in their cash flow more than men through the precondition for effective certification of fertiliser and one that will have a pay-off for agricultural season, then a similar programme might offer them higher rewards. both women and men, with potentially higher benefits for women. However, the implementation costs of such an intervention could be significant in Africa, since vouchers and inputs need to be delivered within a short time period. State of evidence: EMERGING Policy-makers should ensure that they have sufficient resources to execute such an No direct, rigorous evidence is available on the impact of providing certified intervention, and should consider designing a smart delivery mechanism to decrease smaller bags of fertiliser on agricultural productivity. the cost of delivery to farmers. State of evidence: PROMISING Evidence is available that vouchers can increase the use of fertiliser by women, but the impact of time-limited discounts is not differentiated by gender. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 49 Priority 6. Increase women’s use of improved seeds30 Improved seeds can boost farmers’ yields. Yet female farmers may not be able to the case in the Fertiliser Input Subsidy Programme in Malawi, where farmers were afford to purchase improved seeds or may have limited knowledge or confidence in given coupon packages for purchasing fertiliser, hybrid or open-pollinated varieties of their quality. A study of soybean adoption in Nigeria examined simple cross-sectional maize seed and legumes.32 However, as the evidence from Mali’s free fertiliser data and found that women tend to use improved soybean seeds less often than experiment shows, subsidising one input may affect farmers’ use of other inputs, so men. This difference correlates with lower access to hired labour and fewer market the aspect of complementarities between different farm inputs needs to be taken opportunities.31 Women’s limited use of improved seeds, and returns from these into account.33 inputs, have played a role in increasing the gender gap in Malawi, while in northern Nigeria the use of these seeds is a factor that has helped to close the gender gap.v State of evidence: EMERGING Few rigorous studies have empirically examined increased use or the returns from Evidence is indirect and is related to other non-labour inputs and not directly to improved seed varieties. For this reason, this section offers policy guidance based the use of improved seeds. upon lessons from comparable sectors, including the market for pharmaceuticals. Based on these lessons, policy-makers should consider piloting and evaluating the following policy options. They should also carefully consider the limitations that women farmers face in accessing other inputs that may be required for successfully Help women better identify and obtain good-quality seed cultivating higher-quality seed, such as fertiliser and labour at certain points in the production cycle. Policy-makers could pilot and evaluate programmes that encourage extension agents to teach farmers how to identify quality seeds, and provide incentives to seed Provide flexible financing for seeds retailers to label and brand good-quality seeds and certify smaller bags of improved seeds. As in the cases of fertiliser and medicines, farmers often do not trust the Policy-makers could pilot and assess time-sensitive financing options, such as quality of seeds purchased from the market, particularly if they need to buy seeds in vouchers, loans or transfers for the purchase of improved seed and other inputs that uncertified bags. Female farmers may face greater difficulties in accessing market may be needed for cultivating improved seed varieties. The same barriers that information and therefore, if they doubt the quality of seeds available, will be even less hamper fertiliser use may also limit seed purchases. Time-sensitive financing options likely than men to purchase them. The example of pharmaceutical drugs markets, may provide potential policy remedies when aligned with women’s cash flow. An where fake drug sellers complicate quality concerns, may offer lessons to improve ongoing experiment with seed vouchers in the Democratic Republic of Congo offers access to quality seeds. In Uganda, when an external NGO entered the local market to an innovative application of this approach (see Box 6). Policy-makers may also sell authentic quality drugs, the availability of fake drugs decreased and the consider combining vouchers for a range of inputs within the same intervention, as is reputation of their providers diminished, as evidenced by a randomised experiment.34 v The survey data from Nigeria measures the difference in purchased seed use, which is likely to include improved seeds. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 50 Another field experiment examined anti-malarial drugs in Tanzania and showed that purchased inputs, pilot programmes that provide smaller bags of certified improved adoption and learning about drugs were higher where misdiagnosis of malaria was seeds may offer another effective policy option.37 higher, and that individuals learned from the bad experiences of previous adopters.35 Policies encouraging extension organisations to teach farmers about identifying State of evidence: EMERGING quality seeds or helping seed retailers to label and brand quality seeds might offer No rigorous evidence of positive agricultural productivity impacts is available for effective ways of solving misconceptions about quality.36 Since female farmers improving access to good-quality seed. cultivate smaller plots on average, and therefore may need smaller quantities of Box 6: Boosting Women’s Access to Extension and Seed Inputs in the Democratic Republic of Congo The World Bank-funded Agricultural Rehabilitation and Recovery are familiar. Although extension can encourage the adoption of Support Project (PARRSA) in the DRC is an example of an improved seeds and other practices to increase agricultural agricultural development initiative that takes an innovative, gender- productivity, female attendance at extension activities in the DRC is sensitive approach. The project aims to improve agricultural very low. To address this imbalance, half of the PARRSA productivity among smallholder farmers by stimulating the market demonstration plots are reserved for women, and the programme for seeds of high-yield varieties in the northern part of Equateur also ensures that some of the local trainers are female. Province. The project is developing seed markets both by increasing supply (supporting seed multipliers at the local level to produce and Observations in the field indicate that extension services have limited sell their own seeds) and demand (providing agricultural extension impact only if not complemented by other interventions to increase services and seed vouchers). the demand for improved seeds. To address this challenge, the project distributes seed vouchers to offer price discounts to women and men The provision of information and training – through agricultural in 60 villages. Additionally, a truck delivers seeds directly to half of the extension and other means – is an important element of enhancing villages in order to evaluate how lack of transportation might hinder productivity and overcoming the gender gap among Africa’s future uptake of high-yielding seed varieties. The World Bank’s Gender smallholder farmers. Extension services are especially important Innovation Lab and the Paris School of Economics are collaborating when introducing new types of seed to farmers, who may not be with PARRSA to conduct a rigorous evaluation of the impact of this willing to take risks and may prefer to plant seeds with which they approach on both women and men. Source: World Bank. 2014. DRC PARRSA Implementation, unpublished mimeo. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 51 Priority 7. Tailor extension services to women’s needs, and leverage social networks to spread agricultural knowledge Knowledge and training on farming methods and techniques are critical for all there are benefits from the intervention in cultivating crops, the programme has had farmers, but it is particularly important to target female farmers. Women farmers tend a significantly lower impact on livestock holdings by female-headed households. to receive second-hand information from husbands and friends if they are not the head of their household, may not attend field training activities due to household State of evidence: PROMISING responsibilities or mobility constraints, and may not be able to interact with male Rigorous empirical evidence is available within African contexts of positive extension agents due to cultural norms.38 Female farmers in Malawi receive fewer impacts on women’s agricultural productivity when extension is targeted extension services than men, and this difference contributes to the country’s gender specifically to women farmers. gap. Similarly, extension services do not lead to the same returns for female farmers in Ethiopia and Uganda as for their male counterparts, suggesting that these services are less effective for them or are poorly attuned to their needs. The following policy options may help address these challenges and thus reduce the gender gaps in Bring agricultural training and advice to women’s doorsteps through these contexts. farmer field schools and mobile phone applications Train extension agents to target female farmers and be more responsive Policy-makers should consider expanding farmer field schools and leveraging mobile to their agricultural information needs phone applications to provide women farmers with agricultural training and advice. Women tend not to participate in extension trainings or similar initiatives because Policy-makers should consider revisiting their extension services models, they are unable to travel long distances to sessions or they do not have enough time encouraging agents to specifically target women farmers, and providing the type of to devote to them.40 Farmer field schools and mobile phone applications may enable information that these farmers need. Ethiopia’s Rural Capacity Building Project women to receive agricultural information despite these challenges. (RCBP) offers a good example of such an intervention. The programme, which focuses on improving the delivery of extension service systems throughout the Farmer field schools involve regular sessions, from planting to harvest, where groups of country, explicitly seeks to improve women’s participation and to promote gender neighbouring farmers learn new agricultural techniques and discuss farm management equality within the extension system by training agents to specifically target women issues. The farmer field school extension agenda can better incorporate specific topics farmers.39 A recent evaluation of the programme has found mixed but generally that benefit women farmers, such as training modules on crops that may be more encouraging evidence of impact on female-headed households, which were more beneficial for them to cultivate. The flexible training schedules of field schools can also likely to be in contact with local agricultural offices in the programme intervention better accommodate women farmers, who must already balance farm work, child-care areas than in comparison areas. Both female- and male-headed households have and household responsibilities. A study of farmer field schools in Kenya, Tanzania and experienced positive impacts from the programme and, while the magnitude of Uganda found that the programme helped improve the per capita agricultural income impact is lower for women, it is not a significant difference. The programme has also of female-headed households by a large margin compared with male-headed benefited females and males equally in terms of high-value crop cultivation. While households. Crop productivity also increased in participating female-headed Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 52 households in Kenya and Tanzania. Overall, the study found that female-headed then encourage these volunteers to promote agricultural information within their households benefited much more than male-headed households from participating in social circles. This approach has shown promising results in Mozambique, where these farmer field schools. extension agents identified female volunteer farm advisors within communities and brought extension demonstrations closer to women’s homes. The results showed Lastly, pilot interventions, such as the Community Knowledge Worker Initiative in that in communities that had female farm advisors, both female and male farmers Uganda, where a community contact farmer provides mobile phone agricultural services were more likely to adopt sustainable land management practices.42 Similarly, to farmers, are now being scaled up.41 Community contact farmers help provide their promising evidence from Malawi suggests that women can be just as effective in peers with weather forecasts, crop price information and advice on crop diseases by delivering agricultural information to their peers (see Box 7). Policy-makers could also virtually linking them with extension offices that may be far away. Such interventions complement the use of farm advisors by tapping into the social networks that already underscore the ease and speed with which information and communication exist within women’s or mixed-sex farmer organisations. technologies (ICT) can make better and more tailored advice available for women farmers. State of evidence: PROMISING State of evidence: PROMISING Positive gendered impacts on agricultural productivity of farmer field schools Available empirical evidence shows that female volunteer farm advisors have been recorded in African countries, but no direct evidence of productivity successfully help in providing agricultural information to both women and impacts by gender is available for providing agricultural services using men farmers. mobile phones. Identify female volunteer farm advisors to spread information within women’s social networks Policy-makers may also identify female volunteer farm advisors within farming communities, provide agricultural training to these volunteers and encourage them to promote this knowledge within their social circles. Social networks offer a powerful asset that policy-makers can leverage to bridge the gender gap in agricultural productivity. In order to better provide agricultural advice to women, policy-makers can identify female volunteer advisors within communities, who agree to regularly meet with extension agents for agricultural training and demonstrations. They would Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 53 Box 7: Leveraging Social Networks to Spread Agricultural Knowledge in Malawi Poor farmers may benefit from many simple and inexpensive Twice as many farmers displayed greater knowledge of the technologies, such as using compost, yet they are often reluctant to technique; take them up. One explanation is that a farmer may not know Three times as many farmers actually used the technique; enough about a technology to believe in its benefits or to try it on her own plot, especially when her own and her family’s livelihoods Male and female lead farmers performed equally well in depend on a successful harvest. Recognising this obstacle, many transferring knowledge; governments have looked to agricultural extension programmes to Female lead farmers far outperformed men when both were transfer knowledge to farmers, but rates of adoption remain low. provided with a cash incentive. Nevertheless, female lead farmers were not perceived as favourably Research from the World Bank’s Development Impact Evaluation as their male counterparts, in spite of their equal performance levels. Initiative in Malawi suggests that social networks may provide more They received lower assessments than their male peers in terms of effective channels for spreading agricultural knowledge. Women and their knowledge, ability and the quality of their teaching. Thus, while men, moreover, are equally successful in imparting this new norms around gender may limit the efficacy of using social networks information. Under a programme carried out by Malawi’s Ministry of to spread technical knowledge, targeted interventions can partially Agriculture, lead farmers in rural areas received training on overcome these cultural and social barriers. innovative methods for growing maize, including pit planting for water retention in dry areas and using compost. A randomised control trial found that, thanks to lead farmers: Source: A. Benyishay, M. Jones, F. Kondylis and M. Mobarak. 2014. “Farmers Teaching Farmers: Gender and Lead Farming”. Mimeo. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 54 Priority 8. Promote women’s cultivation of high-value/cash crops emergence and seedling vigour, probably because they are more involved in Women and men often cultivate different types of crop, and women are less likely sowing and weeding operations. than men to cultivate cash crops.43 A majority share of these cash crops may be sold in the market or exported, may command a higher market value and may be used as a • As with encouraging the adoption of high-value/cash crops among men, measures are critical to mitigate the riskiness of these new crop varieties and to food or non-food crop. While this difference in crops cultivated by women and men provide adequate and timely growing information to farmers. contributes to widening the gender gap in several contexts, in Malawi and northern Nigeria women farmers who participate in commercial agriculture receive higher • Men often play a critical role in the choice of crops. For example, in a recent returns than men from this choice (holding all else equal). initiative to improve Vitamin A intake in Uganda, biofortified orange fleshed sweet potatoes (OSP) vines were distributed to farmers. Evaluation of the programme In order to improve women’s overall productivity and welfare, policy-makers should found that on about 60% of the plots, women and men jointly made the decision pilot and evaluate programmes that introduce high-value/cash crops into women’s to grow OSP, even though men had a greater say in the decision-making process. cropping systems. They must take into account the following considerations when On another 17% of the plots both women and men decided jointly, but women had designing these measures: a higher degree of control in making the decision. On 20% of the plots, women alone made the decision to cultivate OSP, and men alone made the decision on only 5% of the plots.46 The fact that men have an important role in the decision- • To reap the full benefits, cash crops often need to be complemented with other making process should also be considered when designing interventions that inputs, such as improved seed varieties, fertiliser and hired labour, to which encourage women to cultivate high-value and cash crops. Because traditional women may lack access. roles reserve cash crops for men and confine women to growing food crops, • Access to markets is critical to the success of these crops. This spans a range of attempts to increase production of high-value/cash crops by women could lead to potential issues from securing transport to being able to get the necessary capture of the benefits by their husbands. Policy-makers should consider documents for export, to getting timely and accurate pricing information. branding high-value/cash crops as female crops in extension programmes and • Women may prefer particular crops because of these crops’ maturation periods, encouraging women to cultivate them. yields, taste or colour. These preferences could affect their decision to take up high-value and cash crops.44 Furthermore, women tend to favour crops that State of evidence: EMERGING require less upfront investment and less use of complementary inputs.45 Programmes should encourage women to adopt crops that possess their Limited, indirect evidence is available of positive impacts of high-value or cash preferred traits. For example, research on cultivation of Nerica rice varieties in crop cultivation by women. Ghana, Togo and Guinea showed that men favoured short growing cycles and plant height characteristics, while women preferred traits such as good Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 55 Priority 9. Facilitate women’s access to and effective participation in markets Simply boosting a woman’s farm production will not automatically improve her Channel existing groups to access market opportunities income. In situations where women do not have access to markets to sell their crops, Policy-makers could also pilot and evaluate interventions that channel women’s improvements in productivity may not directly yield profitable returns. Male/female social groups to improve their market access and information. For instance, in the differences in a plot’s distance from the nearest road contribute to the gender past many programmes in Africa and Asia have channelled social groups of women, productivity gap in Tanzania. In Malawi, even though both women and men access such as religious, vocational and financial groups, to impart business training and agricultural marketing offices, women derive lower levels of benefit from this access link them to agricultural value chains. Accessing these opportunities through groups compared with male farmers. Governments and development organisations should makes the process easier for women and enhances their bargaining power. Moreover, therefore prioritise improving market access and participation for female farmers. women demand access to more entrepreneurial capital due to positive influences Utilisation of ICT and leveraging of existing social groups offer potential tools to from their peers, as suggested by non-experimental evidence from Paraguay.50 In improve access to market services and information. Because the evidence of many Senegal and Burkina Faso, a study classified village organisations into market-based ICT-based pilot interventions in Africa is patchy, policy-makers should understand in or community-based organisations based on their primary role and found that particular the use of ICT in the context of the market challenges that women and men market-based organisations were more effective in providing services such as face, such as the high cost of travelling to market or the inability of those living in information and training, which require fewer resources.51 Female groups can also remote areas to access information.47 collectively transport their agricultural produce to markets. In Uganda, for example, female-headed households sold smaller amounts of coffee in the market because of Provide market services through ICT a lack of transportation and lower wealth levels.52 Groups can help female farmers to pool transportation costs and reduce unit costs. Policy-makers may consider piloting ICT innovations and expanding the evidence base around the impact of these pilots on female farmers’ access to markets and information. Several projects in Africa have sought to better connect farmers to State of evidence: EMERGING markets and to provide agricultural information via mobile phones. For instance, a No direct evidence is available relating to agricultural productivity or channelling mobile phone intervention in Uganda led to increased market participation by market information through social networks, but this policy may be easily farmers, particularly by those who cultivated perishable crops.48 Mobile phone implemented. applications have also helped farmers receive more consistent prices for their crops. In Niger, the agricultural grain output prices that farmers received were much less variable due to the spread of mobile phone use.49 State of evidence: PROMISING Direct evidence is available of the efficacy of mobile phones in providing market information, but the results are not specific to women. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 56 Priority 10. Raise education levels of adult female farmers Across the countries profiled in this report, women’s lower levels of education have and harvesting seasons. Mobile phones were offered in about 58 of 140 programme hampered both their access and returns to agricultural resources. The gender gap in villages to further assist in learning. An evaluation of the programme found positive human capital observed today is partly due to women’s lack of access to education in results of learning for both women and men, suggesting that innovative methods of previous decades. Although girls’ school enrolment rates have increased markedly, teaching adults can successfully improve women’s education levels in rural contexts. offering the promise that future generations of women farmers will not face the same An even more exciting impact of the programme is that it has resulted in more obstacles to productivity, today’s adult female farmers continue to have lower women cultivating cash crops compared with non-programme villages, suggesting education levels. that non-traditional adult education may help women boost their productivity.53 Policy-makers should consequently consider piloting, evaluating and further State of evidence: PROMISING developing programmes that will improve women’s education levels, including literacy Rigorous empirical evidence is available of changing female production decisions and numeracy. A rural adult education programme in Niger offers interesting ideas for through improving their education levels. improving the basic literacy skills of adults (see Box 8). Courses for improving literacy and numeracy were offered over a period of two years. Class schedules were closely aligned to the agricultural seasons and classes were not offered during peak planting Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 57 Box 8: Adult Education and Mobile Phones in Niger Niger has one of the most pronounced gender literacy gaps in the mobile phones, and also practised reading and writing, reinforcing world: 43% of men have basic reading and writing skills, compared learning from traditional literacy and numeracy classes. with just 15% of women. Food insecurity is chronic in rural areas, and lack of access to market information – reinforced by illiteracy – is a The results of Project ABC are extremely promising, especially for key contributing factor. To help address this challenge, Catholic women. In the wider education programme, both female and male Relief Services (CRS) established a two-year adult education participants considerably improved their literacy and maths skills, programme across 140 villages. with no significant difference between them in their performance. Those in ABC villages, who additionally received mobile phone As part of a randomised experiment in collaboration with Tufts and training, improved even more, scoring 20% higher than their non- Oxford Universities, an extra module was added in 58 of the villages: ABC counterparts. One interesting finding from the programme was Projet Alphabetisation de Base par Cellulaire or “Project ABC”, which that students learned more effectively with teachers of their own provided cheap shared mobile phones and taught students how to gender, which has valuable implications for future programme use them. Interventions that use simple mobile phone technology in design. Furthermore, gains in basic literacy, numeracy and mobile rural Africa have proliferated in recent years, in recognition of the phone skills translated into a real boost in agricultural diversification. devices’ enormous potential to increase the flow of information and ABC households increased the number of crops they produced by thereby transform farmers’ lives. Armed with a mobile phone (and 8% compared with non-ABC households. Moreover, ABC women the skills to use it), a farmer can more easily obtain useful farmers, who were more likely to grow cash crops such as peanuts information on markets, pricing, agronomy and weather, enhancing and okra after taking part in the programme, largely drove this her productivity and boosting her livelihood. In Project ABC, increase in diversification. participants were enabled to access market information using Sources: J.C. Aker, C. Ksoll and T.J. Lybbert. 2012. “Can Mobile Phones Improve Learning? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Niger”. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 4(4): 94-120; J.C. Aker and C. Ksoll. 2013. “Can Mobile Phones Improve Agricultural Outcomes? Evidence from a Randomized Experiment in Niger”. Mimeo; UNESCO, International Literacy Data. http://www.uis.unesco.org/literacy/Pages/data-release-map-2013.aspx?SPSLanguage=EN Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 58 Broader Lessons for Policy Design and Implementation A number of general considerations should guide policy-makers’ design and implementation of the policy options proposed in this report. Take advantage of complementarities: Female farmers across all the Productive impacts of cash transfers, including higher use of inputs such as countries profiled face multiple constraints. The proposed policy actions may fertiliser and hired labour by women farmers, have also been observed in have a greater impact in reducing the gender gap if policy-makers take Zambia, where cash was given to households with children under the age advantage of the potential synergies between productive factors, including of five.55 seeds, fertiliser and labour. Getting the combination right will require paying Account for constraints faced by different kinds of female-headed attention not only to the type of inputs (e.g. a high-yielding crop variety that households: Women farmers may cultivate their farms along with their male requires fertiliser) but also to the particular constraints in a given context. counterparts in a household, or serve as the head of their own household. Look to the private sector as a potential partner: Policy-makers should Decision-making powers and constraints may vary for these female heads of consider looking to the private sector as a partner for solutions, including for the household depending on whether they are unmarried, divorced, widowed or sale of fertiliser and high-quality seeds in small packages and the provision of have a male head of household who has migrated out. technical guidance. Understand the broader spectrum of economic activities that women and Leverage women’s groups to enhance impact: Policy-makers can help men farmers engage in: These activities may provide scope for women’s farming groups take advantage of group dynamics to access seeds, complementary interventions – for example, improving not only access to bags of fertiliser, land and hired labour or machinery. Supporting the creation of labour and equipment for harvesting, but also strengthening post-harvest these groups in the form of farmer associations (where they do not already processing and packaging. exist) may also help women share agricultural knowledge and overcome Recognise when to end the intervention: Many of the challenges discussed cultural barriers to accessing land and labour. in this section stem from problems in markets and institutions. In some cases, Consider cash without any strings attached: While a clear consensus on the the policy remedy does not need to be a permanent programme. For example, a impact of unconditional cash transfers on productivity has not yet emerged, farmer may be reluctant to shift to growing a high-value crop because she does such an approach may help women and men in cash-constrained rural not know how best to cultivate it. A short-term voucher programme may enable households. For example, Malawi’s Social Cash Transfer Scheme, a safety net her to try to grow the crop and develop this knowledge on her own while programme that did not primarily target agriculture, provided cash without minimising her costs because she will not have paid for key inputs. However, conditions to extremely poor households. In addition to its impacts on poverty, once she learns how to cultivate the high-value crop correctly and adopts it, the an impact evaluation of the programme found strong increases in ownership of market failure will no longer exist, and the voucher programme will not need to productive agricultural assets and time devoted to household farms.54 be continued. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 59 Narrowing the Gender Gap in African Agriculture: Moving the Agenda Forward This report presents clear evidence of the wide and pervasive gender gap in African Pilot, develop and evaluate emerging ideas to identify new, effective agriculture. While it is possible to identify country priorities to close this gap, the policies and programmes for women farmers: For too long, a limited evidence base to inform effective policy-making is still limited. Nevertheless, this understanding of the key constraints facing female farmers in Africa (and in section broadly marks out a roadmap to jumpstart policy action on this important other developing regions) has hindered efforts to reduce the gender gap in issue. It also highlights the roles and responsibilities of African governments, donors agriculture. Now that policy-makers have this knowledge, they must prioritise and development organisations in moving the agenda forward. the development of effective policies and programmes to address these key constraints, including labour. Policy-makers can start this process by piloting Recommendations for African Policy-makers the emerging ideas that this report puts forward (such as community-based child-care), evaluating their effectiveness and sharing this knowledge. These In addition to clearly integrating gender into their national agriculture plans, African efforts will both enable policy-makers to identify effective programmes to policy-makers can take a number of concrete actions to reduce the gender gap in the support women farmers in their contexts and offer insight, guidance and agriculture sector. options to policy-makers in other countries, where women farmers face similar constraints. Make a robust commitment to narrowing the gender gap: As part of the Strengthen data collection and analysis efforts to pinpoint the specific African Union’s Year of Agriculture and Food Security, African governments constraints that women farmers face in non-profiled countries: This report should make a new, robust commitment to narrowing the gender gap in focuses on just six countries in sub-Saharan Africa. These countries agriculture and should unveil this commitment at the AU Summit in Equatorial encompass more than 40% of the region’s population, cover a broad range of Guinea in June 2014. Such a commitment should reflect this report’s contexts and suggest some key challenges faced by female farmers comprehensive understanding of the gender gap in the agriculture sector and throughout the region, such as using crop inputs. However, as the profiles also the policy priorities set out in this section, which address the main barriers that suggest, the factors accounting for the gender gap in agricultural productivity undermine the productivity of more than 40% of sub-Saharan Africa’s women may vary by country. Policy-makers in countries not directly profiled in this farmers. Without sufficient attention to increasing women’s productivity, report start from a lower level of data availability. They should consider growth in agriculture may remain stalled, and broader development efforts may strengthening their capacity to execute comparable data collection and be hampered. analysis efforts so that they can begin to reduce any costly gender gaps in their Implement and scale up promising programmes and policies to support agriculture sectors. In addition, the country profiles suggest that, in order to women farmers: This report empowers African policy-makers across six further enhance understanding of the gender gap in African agriculture overall, countries – Ethiopia, Malawi, Niger, Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda – with a more data and empirical studies are needed on the time and labour allocation detailed understanding of the specific constraints faced by women farmers in of women farming within male-headed, female-headed and multi-generational their countries. It further highlights promising interventions, i.e. those with some households, as well as on soil fertility, access to water and irrigation sources, evidence of impact, to address these challenges. Policy-makers in the profiled and constraints faced by different kinds of female-headed households. countries and across the continent should implement and further refine the promising programmes relevant to their particular country contexts. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 60 Recommendations for Donors and Development support women farmers in their specific contexts and it would also offer insight, Organisations guidance and options to policy-makers in other countries, where women farmers face similar key constraints. Meanwhile, donors and development organisations should play a catalytic role in supporting African governments to close the gender gap. This report empowers Support national agriculture plans with robust gender components: This African governments with a new and rich understanding of the key challenges that report should equip African policy-makers, particularly in the profiled countries, female farmers in their countries face. Donors and development organisations can with the tools to address the gender gap, and these policies and programmes play an important role in assisting governments to transform this information into should be reflected in their national agriculture plans. Donors should work to tangible improvements in the welfare of their women farmers, by taking the support the funding of national agriculture plans directly, and at the very least following actions. ensure that complementary efforts are in line with the gender components contained in national plans. Create a “challenge fund” to support the piloting and scaling up of Consider the report’s findings in relation to donor programmes: Many effective policies to support female farmers and close the gender gap: As donor organisations and development partners operate programmes focusing described here, knowledge of effective policies to close the gender gap in on women farmers in Africa. This report’s findings should therefore help inform African agriculture is limited. For example, women farmers across all the their programming in the six profiled countries, while the policy options may profiled countries face significant challenges in mobilising and supervising also help guide their work with female farmers facing similar constraints in farm labourers to work on their plots. Yet there are no proven policies or other contexts. Donors and development organisations should also continue to programmes to help women farmers overcome these obstacles. For this draw on gender analysis in their programme design to better understand the reason, donors should partner with African governments and fund efforts to underlying constraints that women face, and should collect sex-disaggregated develop effective policies to help women farmers overcome the key constraints data as part of the M&E of agricultural programmes to better track impacts on identified in this report. One way donors can do this is through the creation of a women farmers. “challenge fund”. This independent fund would provide African policy-makers with technical assistance to help them pilot, develop and evaluate Taking these steps will mark an important turning point for Africa’s women farmers programmes, such as the emerging policy options identified in this report, to towards the opportunity and equality they rightfully deserve. better support women farmers. The fund’s activities would generate widespread benefits: It would enable policy-makers to identify effective programmes to Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 61 Farmers harvest a crop of beans in Melkassa, Ethiopia. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa Photo: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation 62 appendices APPENDIX 1: Comparability of Country Profiles Although every effort has been made to standardise the country profiles in this Third, structural differences in the country context may be responsible for the report, readers should keep in mind certain differences relating to survey data and different approaches. For this reason, some country studies do not cover particular methodology when making comparisons. factors, as Table 2 on page 38 shows. First, the surveys that inform the country profiles were implemented by national These three types of difference affected the choice of control variables in the statistics bureaux in different contexts, and therefore they may vary in the following underlying decomposition analyses.ii All the analyses employ controls for the ways. For one thing, the precise wording of questions and the measurement of geographical area in which a particular household lies, but these can range from different aspects of farming may differ.i For example, the surveys in some countries, small (e.g. enumeration areas in Uganda) to much larger (e.g. states in Nigeria). All of such as Uganda and Malawi, distinguish contact with extension services at the plot the analyses control for the crop choice of farmers or households, but the individual manager level while others, such as Ethiopia, Niger and Nigeria, measure extension crops and their groupings differ across the studies. contact at the household level. In addition, some country surveys, such as Uganda’s, ask about specific sources of agricultural extension, while others have a single Despite these differences, it is important to note that the content of each of the question to cover multiple sources of extension. country surveys is largely similar and that the core methodology is consistent across the studies. Moreover, as these studies were conducted, there was communication Second, the authors of the studies that underlie the country profiles may have between the authors, which facilitated the comparability of the country analyses. approached the analysis somewhat differently. The structure of the data itself (e.g. Readers who are interested in more detail on a given country are encouraged to the definition of “farm manager” in the Ethiopia profile) may account for some of consult the longer studies that informed the country profiles. these differences. In addition, at the outset of their analyses, the authors made informed judgments regarding the factors that may matter for the analysis based on existing literature, and then focused their analyses on these factors. i The cross-country differences in questionnaire design that were put in perspective during the research programme prompted the LSMS team to increase the comparability of questionnaire instruments in subsequent rounds of supported surveys. ii Control variables are variables that are used in the regression analysis to deal with factors such as regional differences, but the results for this are not discussed here. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 63 APPENDIX 2: Women Farmers and household Headship Sex of the Manager and Sex of the Household Head The following table illustrates the distribution of male and female farmers by sex of Tanzania and Uganda include plots managed jointly by more than one household the household head, based on the LSMS-ISA survey samples from each of the six member. For instance, of the 2,224 plots managed by more than one household country profiles. For example, in Ethiopia, the large majority of male farmers (1,268 out member in the Uganda sample, most of these plots (1,711 out of 2,224) are found in of 1,277) in the survey sample reside in male-headed households, while most female male-headed households. farmers (231 out of 241) reside in female-headed households. The analyses from sex of household head Ethiopia Malawi niger nigeria (north) nigeria (south) tanzania uganda MAle FeMAle MAle FeMAle MAle FeMAle MAle FeMAle MAle FeMAle MAle FeMAle MAle FeMAle Sex of Plot Manager Male 1,268 9 11,894 134 4,051 17 1,851 4 539 10 1,919 115 4,832 156 Female 10 231 814 3,530 501 245 98 97 186 210 237 1199 4,481 2,491 Joint 3,028 456 1,711 513 Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 64 APPENDIX 3: Going Beyond the Survey Data – Other Factors that May Matter for the Gender Gap The country profiles contained in this report identify several key factors as the main time, family and inheritance laws can also disadvantage women, making it difficult for contributors to the gender gap in agricultural productivity. However, there are other them to claim and permanently transfer land following divorce or the death of a father often discussed factors to consider that have not been adequately captured in the or husband.5 analysis due to limitations in the data, surveys and methodology used. This section draws on existing empirical literature to explore how three other key factors – Studies have found a very consistent trend in land ownership in Africa: Rural women access to land, social networks and soil quality – may also affect the gender are less likely to control and own land than rural men.6 This pattern is supported by productivity gap in Africa. analyses of the LSMS-ISA data. For example, in Tanzania, of the total agricultural land area that households own or access, 91% is owned by farmers (whether formally Access to land documented or not), 44% is owned solely by men, 16% by women only and 39% is owned jointly.7 In the six countries analysed in this report, men report consistently Access to and control of land are critical for agricultural investment and the welfare of higher levels of sole ownership of land than women, except in Malawi. In Nigeria, they rural households. The LSMS-ISA datasets, despite their rich level of detail, can shed own 99 times as much land area as women, although 13% of land is managed by only partial light on complex issues related to land access and control. Furthermore, women.i These ratios are lower in other countries: 7:1 in Niger, 3:1 in Tanzania and 2:1 in the decomposition analysis was (by design) carried out only for those already farming Uganda.ii These inequalities in formal land rights also inhibit women’s security of land, thereby limiting its scope. Nevertheless, this analysis does suggest that a tenure on the land that they farm, as well as their ability to claim their rights in the number of factors relating to land (beyond access itself) can help explain the gender case of disputes over land (e.g. competing ownership claims). These challenges make gap, including ownership, land rentals and formal land rights. These findings are the transfer of land much more problematic for women; they rely less on the market complemented by a considerable body of existing literature exploring the importance for temporary land rentals, face formal and informal restrictions on land sales and risk of gender inequalities in access, security of control, tenure and rights over land. losing their land access if their husband dies.8 Women are disadvantaged in both access to and security of control over land. Insecure tenure reduces investment and agricultural productivity. Deeply embedded norms and customary institutions govern women’s access to land Empirical literature has established strong links between the security of land tenure in much of rural sub-Saharan Africa, and women are often disadvantaged under both and the level of investment in that land.9 For example, research in Ethiopia found that statutory and customary land tenure systems.1 Traditionally, women had land use the threat of expropriation tends to reduce investment in soil conservation measures, rights mainly through their husbands and were limited to accessing land that they whereas land certification (which increases security of tenure) boosts investment cultivated and occupied, thereby compromising their rights to own or inherit land. The and rental market activity.10 Similarly, in Rwanda research has shown that women introduction of formal legal systems has often resulted in ambiguous legal experience lower levels of tenure security than men, which constrains their arrangements which, when combined with existing customary institutions, have willingness to make or maintain investment in structures such as bunds, terraces and tended to disadvantage women.2 Despite efforts to take women’s interests into dams.11 A study of nine West African countries concluded that secure tenure tends to account under recent land rights reforms, large gender inequalities in access to significantly increase tree planting and long-term investments, such as leaving land formal land rights persist in many African countries.3 For example, laws may fallow.12 recognise only a single owner of land (disregarding secondary users), thus failing to account for women’s informal access rights under customary systems.4 At the same i In this context, “managed” means purchased, accessed or distributed by clan or family. ii In Malawi, sole ownership of land is similar between women and men. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 65 Weak land security can also dampen agricultural productivity in other ways. One providing training to female and male volunteer farm advisors, who were identified to study in Ghana found that women produce lower yields because they leave land disseminate information in communities about these techniques.21 In communities fallow for shorter periods.13 Women’s weaker tenure security means that they are with male volunteer farm advisors, the programme had no significant impact on more likely to have their land taken away from them when they leave it fallow. adoption. In communities with female advisors, women were more likely to adopt the technology – suggesting that female farm advisors influence other females within Social networks their networks to learn about and adopt agricultural techniques. Moreover, both male and female farmers in communities that had female advisors were also more likely to Informal social networks play a critical role in the exchange of agricultural information teach others about these techniques. and the adoption of agricultural technologies among farmers.14 Detailed data on the role of social networks is beyond the scope of the LSMS-ISA surveys, but existing Soil quality literature has suggested that women’s social networks tend to differ from men’s, and that women and men tend to use their social networks differently, with implications Soil qualityi is a major determinant of crop productivity in Africa, and it is often for their agricultural productivity.15 Women and men tend to rely on sex-segregated claimed that land managed by women has lower soil quality than that managed by social networks for their farming information and these networks tend to be smaller in men.22 However, the high cost and the logistics of large-scale soil testing limit the size for women. Researchers in Mozambique, for example, found that adding new availability of quality data at the farm level. The LSMS-ISA surveys do not include connections within small social networks increased participants’ chances of growing objective data (based on soil chemistry measurements), and thus soil quality was not sunflowers for the first time, with this effect being more pronounced among female- addressed in the country analyses in this report.ii Due to these same challenges, headed households.16 Information networks of pineapple farmers in Ghana, empirical evidence in the existing literature of a gender gap in soil quality is scarce meanwhile, tend to be based on same-gender, clan and age groups.17 In a study in and inconclusive.23 For example, a study from Burkina Faso did not find any evidence Ethiopia, a majority of farmers who had adopted inputs such as fertiliser attributed that women’s plots were of a lower quality; similarly, in Uganda, no difference was their decision to having an individual of the same sex within their social network.18 found between plots owned by husbands and wives (although this was based on a very small sample).24 In southern Ghana, researchers found that women did farm Women may also rely more than men on social networks for accessing agricultural plots with slightly lower levels of organic matter, but that this difference did not tend information.19 Cultural norms, such as restrictions on interacting with men outside the to impact yields.25 household and time and mobility constraints, may restrict avenues for women farmers to access public extension and formal agricultural information services.20 In It may be true that women manage and farm land of lower soil quality than men. such situations, women rely heavily on their female social networks to learn about However, a lack of strong empirical studies highlights the need for further research to new agricultural technologies. In Mozambique, researchers examined the impact of strengthen the evidence base in this area. i While a wide range of indicators can provide information on soil quality, the level of soil fertility – i.e. the amount and composition of nutrients available in the soil – is perhaps the most critical for agricultural productivity. ii LSMS-ISA surveys in some countries include self-reported measures of soil quality. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 66 APPENDIX 4: Evidence and Implementation Guide FOR Policy Priorities to Narrow the Gender Gap Land Study Reports Possible Policy Option State of Evidence* Country Key Findings for Policy** Gender Differences Pilot Intervention Policy priority 1: Strengthen women’s land rights Formalise land rights through Promising Rwanda Titling registration had positive effects on Yes Evaluate the impact of large-scale land registration to increase agricultural investment for both women and men, registration programmes on tenure women’s tenure security. with significantly higher benefits accruing to security for women and men. female-headed households (Ali et al., 2014). Ethiopia Land titling resulted in a significant reduction of No tenure insecurity and an increase in land-related investment (Deininger et al., 2011). Expand co-titling and Promising Tanzania Small financial incentives help achieve high Yes Assess the effect of co-titling on individual titling for women. gender parity in titling at low cost and with no loss women’s access to land, agricultural of demand for land titles (Ali et al., 2013). productivity, empowerment, bargaining power and allocation of resources within the household. Reform family and inheritance Emerging World Eliminating discrimination in land rights between Yes Analyse the impact of reforms in family law to protect women’s rights. women and men is associated with positive and inheritance laws on agricultural development outcomes for women (Hasan et al., investments and productivity using 2013). experimental or quasi-experimental data. Emerging India Equal inheritance rights for girls have the potential Yes to increase their likelihood of inheriting land and improving education levels (Deininger and Goyal, 2013). * A policy is classified as promising if it has at least one impact evaluation with a plausible counterfactual that demonstrates results in the anticipated direction. A policy option is emerging if it lacks direct, rigorous evidence of impact on gender agricultural productivity outcomes. ** The policy studies are described in Part 2: Policy Priorities, and link to the full citations in the endnotes. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 67 Labour study Reports Possible Policy Option State of Evidence* Country Key Findings for Policy** Gender Differences Pilot Intervention Policy priority 2: Improve women’s access to hired labour Offer women farmers Emerging Zambia Unconditional cash transfers can increase the No Test if financing the hire of labour by financing to hire farm labour. amount of money spent on hiring labour women helps increase their use of (Seidenfeld et al., 2013). labour and narrows the gender gap. Compare different mechanisms for doing this, including cash transfers, credit and/or vouchers. Task agents with helping Emerging – – – Examine the effect of training women farmers to find labour. community agents to help women find labour on women’s access to and use of hired farm labour. Policy priority 3: Enhance women’s use of tools and equipment that reduce the amount of labour they require on the farm Provide women farmers with Emerging Kenya and Promote technologies that consider women’s Yes Examine which financing mechanisms financing or discounts for Tanzania labour and financial constraints and that are work best to increase the use of hiring or purchasing culturally appropriate for women to use (Njuki et machinery and tools and its machinery. al., 2013). consequent impact on labour and farm productivity. Policy priority 4: Provide community-based child-care centres Provide community-based Emerging Mozambique Enrolling children in pre-school increases the No Evaluate the direct impact of enrolling child-care centres. likelihood of female labour force participation children in community-based (Martinez et al., 2012). child-care centres on female labour supply on farms. * A policy is classified as promising if it has at least one impact evaluation with a plausible counterfactual that demonstrates results in the anticipated direction. A policy option is emerging if it lacks direct, rigorous evidence of impact on gender agricultural productivity outcomes. ** The policy studies are described in Part 2: Policy Priorities, and link to the full citations in the endnotes. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 68 Non-Labour Inputs study Reports Possible Policy Option State of Evidence* Country Key Findings for Policy** Gender Differences Pilot Intervention Policy priority 5: Encourage women farmers to use more, and higher-quality, fertiliser Provide women farmers with Promising Mali Vouchers for free fertiliser not only increase the Yes Analyse the impact of financing or price discounts use of fertiliser, but also enhance use of other different financing mechanisms and aligned with their cash flow to complementary inputs (Beaman et al., 2013). time-limited discounts on the use of encourage the purchase of fertiliser, other complementary inputs fertiliser. and farm productivity. Kenya Timely and affordable availability of fertiliser is key: No Small price incentives aligned with farmers’ cash flow cycles can increase the use of fertiliser substantially (Duflo et al., 2011). Certify small bags of fertiliser Emerging – – – Test if providing smaller certified bags for use by women. of fertiliser has an impact on fertiliser use and productivity for women and men that is worth the cost. Policy priority 6: Increase women’s use of improved seeds Provide flexible financing for Emerging Mali Vouchers for free fertiliser increase not only use of Yes Assess the influence of different seeds. fertiliser but also use of other complementary financing mechanisms, varying levels inputs (Beaman et al., 2013). of discounts and timing of offering discounts for various inputs on the use and returns from these inputs on female-managed plots. Kenya Timely and affordable availability of fertiliser is key: No Small price incentives aligned with farmers’ cash flow cycle can increase the use of fertiliser substantially (Duflo et al., 2011). Help women better identify Emerging – – – Evaluate the impact of providing and obtain good-quality women with small certified bags of seeds. seeds on the use of good-quality seeds and female agricultural productivity. * A policy is classified as promising if it has at least one impact evaluation with a plausible counterfactual that demonstrates results in the anticipated direction. A policy option is emerging if it lacks direct, rigorous evidence of impact on gender agricultural productivity outcomes. ** The policy studies are described in Part 2: Policy Priorities, and link to the full citations in the endnotes. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 69 information study Reports Possible Policy Option State of Evidence* Country Key Findings for Policy** Gender Differences Pilot Intervention Policy priority 7: Tailor extension services to women’s needs, and leverage social networks to spread agricultural knowledge Train extension agents to Promising Ethiopia Female-headed households benefit from Yes Compare the impact of different agents target female farmers and be extension efforts that specifically seek to improve (e.g. extension service staff, lead more responsive to their women’s participation (Buehren et al., 2013). farmers, volunteer advisors) and agricultural information needs. different modalities of delivery (e.g. face-to-face, via mobile phones, through farmer groups) on the use of farm inputs, agricultural techniques and farm productivity of female-managed plots. Bring agricultural training and Promising Kenya, Female-headed households may benefit more Yes advice to women’s doorsteps Uganda and than male-headed households from participation through farmer field schools Tanzania in farmer field schools (Davis et al., 2010). and mobile phone applications. Identify female volunteer farm Promising Mozambique Selecting female volunteer farm advisors directly Yes advisors to spread information within communities enhances the use of within women’s social agricultural techniques by both female and male networks. farmers within those communities (Kondylis and Mueller, 2013). * A policy is classified as promising if it has at least one impact evaluation with a plausible counterfactual that demonstrates results in the anticipated direction. A policy option is emerging if it lacks direct, rigorous evidence of impact on gender agricultural productivity outcomes. ** The policy studies are described in Part 2: Policy Priorities, and link to the full citations in the endnotes. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 70 access to markets study Reports Possible Policy Option State of Evidence* Country Key Findings for Policy** Gender Differences Pilot Intervention Policy priority 8: Promote women’s cultivation of high-value/cash crops Promote women’s cultivation Emerging – – – Test various mechanisms for increasing of high-value/cash crops. the adoption of high-value/cash crops including increased information and/or subsidies (for seeds, but also for complementary inputs) and evaluate the impact. Policy priority 9: Facilitate women’s access to and effective participation in markets Provide market services Promising Niger Price volatility of grains decreased significantly No Examine if female farmers benefit more through ICT. after roll-out of mobile phones in Niger because of than, and differently from, male farmers increased access to market information (Aker, in using mobile phones to access 2010). agricultural market information. Channel existing groups to Emerging – – – Assess the effect of providing access market opportunities. marketing training and information to female farmers (alone or through groups) on market access, crop sales and agricultural productivity. * A policy is classified as promising if it has at least one impact evaluation with a plausible counterfactual that demonstrates results in the anticipated direction. A policy option is emerging if it lacks direct, rigorous evidence of impact on gender agricultural productivity outcomes. ** The policy studies are described in Part 2: Policy Priorities, and link to the full citations in the endnotes. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 71 Human Capital study Reports Possible Policy Option State of Evidence* Country Key Findings for Policy** Gender Differences Pilot Intervention Policy priority 10: Raise education levels of adult female farmers Raise education levels of adult Promising Niger Adult literacy programmes along with training on Yes Assess the impact on agricultural female farmers. mobile phone use improve literacy and numeracy outcomes of different mechanisms to skills of women and men almost equally and increase women’s literacy and increase cultivation of cash crops by women (Aker numeracy skills. et al., 2012; Aker and Ksoll, 2013). * A policy is classified as promising if it has at least one impact evaluation with a plausible counterfactual that demonstrates results in the anticipated direction. A policy option is emerging if it lacks direct, rigorous evidence of impact on gender agricultural productivity outcomes. ** The policy studies are described in Part 2: Policy Priorities, and link to the full citations in the endnotes. Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 72 APPENDIX 5: Technical Annex on Decomposition Methods This annex provides a technical overview of the quantitative methods used for the observable, plot-/holder-, household- and/or community-level explanatory variables; country profiles presented in this report.1 β is the associated vector of intercept and slope coefficients; and ε is the error term Technical Annex on Decomposition Methods under the assumption that E(εM) = E(εF) = 0. Regression-based decomposition methods have been widely utilised in labour This annex provides a technical overview of the quantitative methods used for the country economics following the seminal papers of Oaxaca (1973)2 and Blinder (1973),3 notably The gender gap “D” is expressed as the mean outcome difference: profiles presented in this report.i in analyses of the gender wage gap, union wage gap and growing wage inequality.4 5 Despite the extensive use Regression-based methodsregression-based of Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition mean decomposition have been widely utilised in labour economics by applied economists over the past three decades following the seminal papers of Oaxaca (1973) and Blinder (1973),iii notably ii and the advances that have been of ( 2 ) (2) in analyses . to extend made the its application to the decomposition of distributional statistics gender wage gap, union wage gap and growing wage inequality. Despite the extensive ivv besides use of mean, the the questions Oaxaca-Blinder that the method regression-based attempts to address mean decomposition by appliedrequire a economists over Equations (1) and (2) imply that: (2) . setpast strongthe of assumptions. three decades6and the advances that have been made to extend its application to Equations (2) (1) and (2) imply that: . the decomposition of distributional statistics besides the mean, the questions that the (3) ∑ ∑ Equations (1) and (2) imply that: In particular, method these methods attempts follow to address a partial require equilibrium a strong approach, set of assumptions.vi where observed Equations (1) and (2) imply that: (2) ∑. ∑ outcomes for one group can be used to construct various counterfactual scenarios ( 3 ) (4) (3) ∑ ∑ for theIn particular, other group. these 7 Anothermethods follow limitation a partial is that equilibrium approach, while decompositions where are useful observed for (3) ∑  ∑. Equations (1) (2) and (2) imply that:(2) outcomes for one group can be used to construct various counterfactual scenarios and Equation could be rewritten as: quantifying, purely in an accounting sense, the contribution of various factors to a for the (4) ∑ ∑ other difference group. in vii Another limitation is that while decompositions are useful for quantifying, an outcome across groups or a change in an outcome for a particular ( 4 ) (3)(4) ∑ Equations (1) and  (2) ∑ imply that: (5) ∑ ∑ ∑ ∑ purely in group over time, theyan accounting are based sense, the contribution on correlations, and of various hence factors be to cannot a difference interpreted as in an and Equation (2) could be rewritten as:  outcome across groups change in an outcome or a parameters, for particular a Fortin group over time, of are they and Equation (2) could be rewritten (3) as: estimates of underlying causal as noted by et al. (2011). The use (4) Subsequently, β* could ∑ be defined as the vector ∑ of ∑ co-efficients that is obtained from a ∑ based on correlations, and hence cannot be interpreted as estimates of underlying causal (5) ∑ ∑ phrases in this report such as “drivers of the gender gap” should therefore be viewed and Equation regression (2) could be rewritten of Y that is based on the as:  parameters, as noted by Fortin et al. (2011). The use of phrases in this report such as in this light. Nevertheless, decomposition methods do document the relative (5) (4) ∑ pooled plot sample ∑ and ∑ includes the group membership ∑ and Equation identifier, i.e. (2) could be a dummy rewritten variable as: identifying female-managed plots. The inclusion of the “drivers of the gender gap” should therefore be viewed in this light. Nevertheless, Subsequently, β* could be defined as the vector of co-efficients that is obtained  from a quantitative importance of factors in explaining an observed gap, thus suggesting group membership indicator in the pooled regression for the estimation β* takes decomposition methods do document the relative quantitative importance of factors in Subsequently, regression of Y β* could that is basedbe ondefined the and as the pooled Equation vector plot (2) sample could of beco-efficients and includes rewritten that the as: is of groupobtained membership intoa from priorities for further analysis and, ultimately, policy interventions. 8 ( 5 ) account (5) the possibility that the ∑ mean difference in plot-level ∑ productivity measure is explaining an observed gap, thus suggesting priorities for further analysis and, ultimately, regression identifier, of a i.e. Y that dummy is based on the variable pooled plot identifying sample and includes female-managed plots. the The group inclusionmembership of the policy interventions.viii explained by the of the identifying gendervariable plot manager, avoiding a possible distortion ofofthe identifier, i.e. a dummy group membership indicator in female-managed the pooled regression for the ∑ estimation of β* takes into plots. The inclusion the To document the extent and drivers of the gender difference in agricultural Subsequently, β* decomposition coulddue results be to (5) defined the as the vector residual group of co-efficients difference that in reflected is β* obtained .of from∑ ix Rearranging a group membership account the possibility indicator that the in themean pooled regression difference for the in plot-level estimation productivity β* takes into measure is productivity, the background papers that underlie this report rely on an To document the extent and drivers of the gender difference in agricultural productivity,Oaxaca- regression Subsequently, Equation β * (5)of Y could by that is be adding based defined and on the as subtracting pooled the vector (i) plot the of sample slope and coefficients includes co-efficient that of the isthe group obtained pooled membership from regression account the explained the genderthat by possibility the plotmeanmanager, of Subsequently, difference β* could inbe avoiding plot-level defined productivity a possible as thedistortion vector measure of of the is co-efficients that is ob Blinder regression-based mean identifier, i.e. a dummy variable identifying female-managed plots. The inclusion of the the background papers thatdecomposition. underlie this reportTypically, they rely on anassume the log of Oaxaca-Blinder an regression- a regression ( andof Y explained decomposition that by the (ii) is based the results return gender on due to to ofthe the the the pooled regression plot observable plot residual manager, ofgroup Y sample that co-variates difference is based and includes avoiding on of a each reflected thepossible pooled the group group β* distortion in plot valued .ix sample of Rearranging and at the includes the group based productivity agricultural mean decomposition.measure (Y ), namely Typically, theygross assume the of value logagricultural output of an agricultural per productivity group β* membership membership identifier, indicator i.e. ,athe in following dummy the pooled is obtained: variable regression identifying for the female-managed estimation of plots. β* takes The into decomposition Equation (5) by results adding due and the toidentifier, subtracting residual(i) i.e. group the a slope dummy difference co-efficient variable of the in reflected identifying β*female-managed pooled .ix Rearranging regression plots. The in hectare, for male- account the possibility that the mean difference in plot-level productivity measure is measure (Y), (M ) and gross namely female-value managed (F )of plots, agricultural estimated output as: for male- (M) and inclusion per hectare, of the ( Equation and group (5) by (ii) the membership adding return and indicator tosubtracting the group in the (i) observable membership the pooled slope co-variates indicator regression co-efficient in ofthe of eachfor pooled the thegroup pooled valued regression regression foratthe estimation of explained by the gender of the plot manager, avoiding a possible distortion of the (6) female- (F) managed plots, estimated as: estimation β*( of andβ* takes (ii) the into , account return to the following thethepossibility account is observable obtained: the group that possibility the co-variatesmean that the difference ofmean in valued eachdifference group at in plot-level productivit decomposition results due to the residual difference reflected in β*.ix Rearranging β* productivity measure plot-level is explained , the following explained is by obtained: by the the gender gender ofof thetheplot manager, plot manager, avoiding a possible dist ∑ Equation (5) by adding and subtracting ∑ (i) the slope co-efficient of the pooled regression ( 1 ) (1) (6)a possible distortion of the avoiding decomposition decomposition results results duedue to theto the residual residual group group difference reflected in β*. ( and (ii) the return to the ⏟observable co-variates of each group valued at (6) reflected in β*.9 Rearranging difference EquationEquation(5) by (5) by adding adding and subtracting and subtracting (i) theco-efficient of the poo (i) the slope β* , the following is obtained: where G indicates the gender of the plot manager (one exception where G indicates the gender of the plot manager (one exception is Ethiopia, where is Ethiopia, where the slope coefficient of the pooled regression ( ∑ (β and *) (ii) andthe (ii) the return return to to the the observable observable co-variates of each grou 0 analysis the analysis isis conducted at conducted theindividual at the individual plot-holder plot-holderlevel) ; X is level); Xa isvector a vectorof kof observable, k plot- covariates of each group valued at β* β * ⏟ ∑ , , the the following following isis obtained: obtained: (6) ⏟ /holder-, household- and/or community-level explanatory variables; β is the associated ∑ ∑ vector of intercept and slope co-efficients; and ε is the error term under the assumption ⏟ (6) ∑ ⏟ that E(εM) = E(εF) = 0. ⏟ ∑ ⏟ ∑ ⏟ ∑ ⏟ ∑ ∑ The gender gap “D” is expressed as the mean outcome difference: ⏟ ⏟ ⏟ ⏟ Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa where (k=1….K) are the estimated intercept and slope co-efficients 73 ⏟ 1 of each co-variate included ∑ in the regressions for the male-managed, ∑ female-managed and pooled plot ⏟ samples. ⏟ decomposition explained results by the due to theof gender residual the plotgroup difference manager, reflected avoiding in β*.ix Rearranging a possible distortion of the Equation (5) by adding and subtracting (i) the slope co-efficient decomposition results due to the residual group difference reflected of the pooled regression in β* .ix Rearranging ( and (ii) the return to the observable co-variates of each group valued Equation (5) by adding and subtracting (i) the slope co-efficient of the pooled regression at β* ( , the following is obtained: and (ii) the return to the observable co-variates of each group valued at β* , the following is obtained: (6) (6) components of Equation (6). Moving beyond the aggregate decomposition, the (6) detailed decomposition involves sub-dividing the endowment and structure effects ∑ ⏟ into the respective contributions of each observable covariate, which correspond to ∑ ⏟ the variable-specific sub-components of the summations included in Equation (6). Fortin et al. (2011) present a detailed account of the assumptions required to identify ∑ ∑ ⏟ ⏟ the population parameters of interest. Two crucial assumptions for the validity of ∑ ∑ aggregate decomposition are (i) overlapping support and (ii) ignorability. ⏟ ⏟ ⏟ ⏟ Overlapping support implies that no single value of X = x or ε = e exists to identify female plot management. Ignorability refers to the random assignment of female where (k=1….K) are the estimated intercept and slope co-efficients plot management conditional on observable attributes. The additional essential of each co-variate where included in the regressions (k=1….K) for the male-managed, female-managed and Where (k=1….Kare) arethe estimated the estimated intercept intercept and slopeand slope co-efficients assumptions required by detailed decomposition to identify the individual pooledofplot eachsamples. co-variate included in the regressions for the male-managed, female-managed and coefficients of each covariate included in the regressions for the male-managed, contribution of each covariate include additive linearity and zero conditional mean. pooled plot samples. female-managed and pooled plot samples. The latter implies that ε is independent of X. In other words, we assume that there is no unobservable heterogeneity that jointly determines the outcome and Equation (6) is known as the aggregate decomposition . The first component is the observable attributes. It should be noted that even if the additional assumptions Equation (6)Equationis known (6)as isthe known aggregateas2 the decomposition . The first is . The first component aggregate decomposition the component is the gender gap endowment effect, i.e. the portion of theendowment that effect is explained , i.e. the effect portion by ofdifferences the gender2 in gap required that is explainedby detailed decomposition may not hold true, aggregate decomposition endowment , i.e. the portion of the gender gap thatby differences is explained byindifferences the in the the levels of observable covariates between levelsboth groups. This of observable effect corresponds to groups. Thisremain would valid as long as overlapping support and ignorability assumptions observablebetween levels ofco-variates co-variates both between both effect corresponds groups. to the This effect corresponds to the the report’s references to “levels”. It is equal to the report’s sum references across report’s all covariates to references “levels”. It is toequal of “levels”.tothe the It is sum equal are tenable. across to all the co-variates sum across all ofco-variates the differencesof the differences differences between male and female means, between valued at the malebetween and femalecorresponding means , valued “average” at the corresponding male and female means, valued at the corresponding “average” return. The second “average” return. The second return. The second component is the structure component effect , i.e.structure iscomponent the the portion the of is effect thethe , i.e. structure gender portion effect theportion ofthe , i.e. While gender itgap ofisthe important driven gender to conduct bygap deviations driven by ofOaxaca-Blinder deviations of decomposition at the mean with gap driven by deviations of each group’seach return the from each group’s return corresponding from the “average” corresponding “average” nationally return. representative The group’s return from the corresponding “average” return. The combined structure combined data, structure the background papers underlying this report return. The combined structure effect corresponds to effect corresponds the report’s effect to corresponds references the report’s the rto toreferences eport’s to referencesrecognise “returns”. The that first to “returns”. termgoing beyond of the The first termthe structure “average” of the structure farmer and understanding the effect “returns”. The first term of the structure effect effect ∑ ∑ represents the male structural heterogeneity represents of the advantage constraints male faced structural , advantage by farmers , with different gender and productivity represents the male structural advantagewhich , which isequal is equal which to the to the portion portion is equal toof of the the the gender gender portion ofgapthe accounted profiles gender gap for by deviations is accounted crucial forfor theby male of deviations design and implementation of male of better-targeted interventions gap accounted for by deviations of maleregression regression co-efficients regressionfrom coefficients from pooled co-efficients pooled counterparts. The aimed from pooled counterparts. second at term of bridging The the the second structure gap. term of Aneffect the important question is whether the findings, based on structure effect counterparts. The second term of the structure effect ∑ ∑ represents the female structural the female the sample represents disadvantage means, structural ,disadvantage are robust which to the decomposition , which of alternative distributional is equal represents the female structural disadvantage, which to the portion equal is is equal of totothe the the gender portion portion gap ofof the driven the gender gapby deviations driven by statistics of pooled deviations beyond regression of pooled the mean. co-regression co- gender gap driven by deviations of pooled efficients from regression female counterparts. efficients coefficients from from female x counterparts.x female counterparts. i A method that is similar in spirit to the mean decomposition relies on the recentred In practice, Equation In practice, [1] is estimated Equation [1]for (i) male-managed is estimated for (i) plots, (ii) female-managed male-managed plots, plots female-managed (ii)regressions plots by Firpo et al. (2009)10 and provides a influence function (RIF) proposed and (iii) the pooled and plot (iii) thesample pooled (with plot a dummy sample variable (with a identifying dummy variable female-managed identifying plots), female-managed plots), In practice, Equation (1) is estimated for (i) male-managed plots, (ii) female-managed straightforward framework within which cross-group differences in any distributional and uses the and resulting uses the vector vector of β of co-efficients resulting M, efficients co- βF and β*,β together M, βF and with the mean β*, together values with the mean values plots and (iii) the pooled plot sample (with a dummy variable identifying female- statistic could be decomposed. The RIF decomposition approach is subsequently for each co-variate for each group X M and X for each co-variate for each group XM and XF, to compute the components F, to compute the components of Equation (6). of Equation (6). managed plots), and uses the resulting vector of Moving beyond coefficients β the aggregate , β and β *, together decomposition, used to provide the detailed decomposition estimates of the aggregate and detailed decomposition of the gender involves sub-involves sub- Moving beyond M F the aggregate decomposition, the detailed decomposition with the mean values for each covariate dividingfor eachthe group X endowment and X and structure effects into the respective contributions of each agricultural productivity distribution. , to compute the gap at different percentiles of the dividing the endowment and structure effects into the respective contributions of each M F observable co-variate, observable which correspond co-variate, whichto the variable-specific correspond sub-components to the variable-specific of the sub-components of the summations included in Equation summations (6). included in Equation (6). Fortin present Fortin et al. (2011) a detailed et al. (2011) account present of the a detailed assumptions account of the required to identify assumptions the required to identify the i The use of the term “disadvantage” is tied to the subsequent section’s discussion of the regression co-efficients estimated from the pooled, male-managed and female-managed plot samples. With respect to their counterparts estimated from the pooled plot sample, the regression co-efficientspopulation parameters population from the female-managed ofparameters plot interest. Two sample that crucial to of expected are interest. assumptions Two and for crucial be positive that the validity assumptions of forwith the are associated aggregate validity key of factors of aggregate production are consistently positive but lower in absolute terms. the same set of regression Conversely, the use of the term “advantage” is linked todecomposition are (i)co-efficients being higher overlapping supportin the male-managed and plot sampleOverlapping (ii) ignorability. than those fromsupport the pooled plot sample. decomposition are (i) overlapping support and (ii) ignorability. Overlapping support implies that no single implies value that no of X=x single or ε of value =e X exists ε identify = x orto female = e exists plot management. to identify female plot management. Ignorability refers random to the refers Ignorability to assignment the random of female plot assignment ofmanagement female plot conditional on management conditional on Levelling the field: Improving Opportunities for Women Farmers in Africa 74 observable The observable attributes. The essential additional attributes. additional assumptions required by required detailed by detailed essential assumptions decomposition to identify the decomposition toindividual identify the individual of contribution each co-variate contribution include of each additive co-variate include additive influence influence influence function function function (RIF) (RIF)(RIF) regressions regressions regressions proposed proposed proposed byby by Firpo FirpoFirpoet et etal. al. al.(2009) (2009)(2009) and andand provides provides provides a aa question is whether the straightforward findings, within framework based which on the sample means, cross-group differences are robust in any to the distributional A straightforward methodstraightforward straightforward that is framework framework similar framework in within spirit within within to which the which which mean cross-group cross-group cross-group decomposition differences differences differences relies inon in in any theanyany distributional distributional distributional recentred decomposition statistic of alternative could be distributional decomposed. The statistics RIF beyond the approach decomposition mean. is subsequently used In the case of quantiles, the influence function is equal to: statistic statistic statistic influence could could functioncould be be be decomposed. (RIF) decomposed. decomposed. regressions The The The RIF RIF proposed RIF decomposition decomposition decomposition by Firpo et approach approach approach al. (2009) is is issubsequently xi subsequently subsequently and provides usedused a to to used toto provideprovide provide provide estimates estimates estimates estimates of ofofof the the thethe aggregate aggregate aggregate aggregate and andand and detailed detailed detailed detailed decomposition decomposition decomposition decomposition of ofof the thethe gender gender gender gap gap gap atatat straightforward A method that is framework similar in within spirit which to the cross-groupmean differences decomposition in of relies any the gender on distributional the recentred gap at { } different different different different percentiles percentiles percentiles percentiles of of theof of the thethe agricultural agricultural agricultural agricultural productivity productivity productivity productivity distribution. distribution. distribution. distribution. (8) , statistic influence could be decomposed. function (RIF) regressions The RIF decomposition proposed by Firpo approach is subsequently et al. (2009) xi and provides used to a provide estimates of the aggregate and detailed decomposition ofinthe gender gap at An RIFstraightforward regression An AnAnAn RIFRIF RIF is RIF similar regression regression regression regression framework to is asimilar is within standard is similar similarto to which toto OLS a a astandard cross-group regression, standard standard OLS OLSOLS differences except regression, regression, regression, that the except any except except that distributional dependent that thatthe the the where where dependent dependent dependent 1 {Y≤QT}is { an indicator function equal to 1 if to the1 value of the outcome variable is is different statistic percentiles could be of isthe decomposed. similar agricultural The a RIF standard productivity decomposition OLS regression, distribution. approach except is that subsequently the dependent used to } is an indicator function equal if the value of the outcome variable variable, variable, is replaced Y,variable, variable, variable, Y,Y, Y, isby is is the replaced replacedRIF replaced byof by the by the the the distributional RIF RIF RIFof of of the thethe statistic distributional distributional distributional Y, is replaced by the RIF of the distributional statistic of interest. The approach of interest. statistic statistic statistic of of ofThe interest. interest. interest. TheThe The approach approachsmaller approach than or equal to the quantile smaller than or equal to the quantile Q T and 0 otherwise, QT and 0 otherwise,fy (q t ) is the density of the is the density of the estimates provideassumes the conditional of the aggregate and detailed of decomposition of the gender gapas ata linear approach An assumes assumes assumes RIF assumes regressionthat that that thatthat the the the isthe conditional conditional conditional conditional similar to a expectation expectation expectation expectation expectation standard of of OLS of the of the the the the regression, can except can can can can be bebe that be be modelled modelled modelled modelled the modelled asas dependentaasa marginal alinear linear linear distribution marginal of Y, and distribution of Y Q is the ,T and QT population T-quantile is the population of the unconditional T-quantile of the unconditional different percentiles of the agricultural productivity distribution. as a linear function function function function variable,function Y, is of of ofof observable ofreplaced observable observable observable observable by the attributes, attributes, attributes, attributes, attributes, RIF of the X XX, ,,X ,such such X, distributional such such such thatthat that that that statistic of | | | , The | interest. ,, as as ,as , asin as in inthe in thein approachthe the the mean mean mean distribution mean of Y. Consequently, distribution of Y. Consequently, decomposition. meanassumes decomposition. Assuming that is the influence function corresponding toto an that the Assuming decomposition. decomposition. decomposition. An RIF observed regression Assuming Assuming Assuming conditional that is similar outcome that that that expectation to a standard of is isthethe isisthe the OLS influence the influence influence influence regression, function can function function function be except corresponding corresponding corresponding corresponding modelled that the as a linear dependent to toan anan observed productivity productivity outcome y y,, X ,,yfory , for the the distributional distributional statistic statistic , the , the RIF is defined as: to an observed function observed observed variable, of productivity productivity productivity observable Y, is replaced by outcome outcome outcome attributes, the RIF of for for , such the for the the the distributional distributional distributional that distributional statistic statistic statistic statistic| of interest. , , theas , inRIF , the RIF the The is is RIF RIF the isdefined defined is defined mean approach as:as: (as: 9 ) (9) . defined as: decomposition. assumes Assuming that that the conditional expectation is the influence function corresponding to an (7)(7) (7) (7) . the . of the . . distributional can be modelled as a linear In practice, the RIF is first estimated as a function of the sample quantile QT (e.g. the 10th observed function productivity of observable outcome attributes,y, for X, such that statistic | , the, RIF as is indefined the mean as: In percentile), practice, the RIFtheis dummy variable as first estimated identifying whether a function of the the observed sample outcome, quantile Y, isthe QT (e.g. smaller decomposition. In the caseAssuming of quantiles, thatthe influence the influence is function is equal function to: corresponding to an In InIn thethe the case case case of of ofquantiles, quantiles, quantiles, the the the influence influence influence function functionfunction is is equal is equal equal to:to: to: than or equal to the sample quantile, and the density estimated using kernel methods at the observed productivity outcome y., for the distributional statistic ( 7 ) (7) , the RIF is defined as: 10th percentile), the dummy variable identifying whether the observed outcome, Y, is point of the sample quantile. In the second stage, the estimated smaller than or equal to the sample quantile, and the density estimated using kernel RIF is used as a dependent {{ } { }} } In (8) the (8) (8)of quantiles,{the (8) case , , , . , function is equal to: influence variable in an OLS regression that is run separately for the male-managed, female-managed (7) methods at the point of the sample quantile. In the second stage, the estimated RIF and pooled plot samples. The resulting parameters γM, γF and γ* replace the β counterparts In the case of quantiles, the influence function is equal to: is used as a dependent variable in an OLS regression that is run separately for the { } In the (8) where case where where where { { } is of{quantiles, { }} the is an } is ,is an an an indicator influence indicator indicator indicator function function function function function isequal equal equal to to equal 1to: to1to if 1if1 the if the if the thevalue value value value of of of theof the thethe outcome outcome outcome outcome variable variable variable variable isisis ismale-managed, female-managed and pooled plot samples. The resulting parameters smaller smaller smaller smaller than than than oror than orequal equalor equal equal to to the to tothethethe quantile quantile quantile quantile QTQandQ Q T Tand and T and 00 0 otherwise, 0otherwise, otherwise, otherwise, is is is isthe the the the density density of of density density ofthe theof the γ the , γ and γ* replace the β counterparts in Equation (6) and are used together with the 4 M F marginal marginal marginal marginal distribution { distribution distribution distribution } of Y of of, of Y Y , and,Y , and and Q and Q Q isQ is Tis the is the the the population population population population T-quantile T-quantile T-quantile T-quantile of ofofof thethe the unconditional unconditional unconditional unconditional the ( 8 ) (8) where { } is an indicator , function T Tequal T to 1 if the value of the outcome variable is group-specific mean values for each covariate, XM and XF, to perform aggregate and distribution distribution distribution distribution smaller than or Yof of.Y ofequalofY .Y . Consequently, . Consequently, Consequently, Consequently, to the quantile QT and 0 otherwise, is the density of the detailed decompositions of any distributional statistic beyond the mean with the marginal where (9) } is anof { distribution Y, and function QT is the indicator equalpopulation to 1 if the T-quantile value of of outcome the the unconditional variable is same framework that underlies the Oaxaca-Blinder mean decomposition. (9) (9) (9) of Y. Consequently, distribution . .. . smaller than or equal to the quantile QT and 0 otherwise, is the density of the marginal In distribution practice, the of RIF Yis , and first QT is the as estimated population a function T-quantile of the sample of the unconditional quantile Q (e.g. the 10th (9) In InInpractice, practice, practice, the the the RIFRIF RIF is is first is first first estimated . estimated estimated asas aas aa function function function of of of thethethe sample samplesample quantile quantile quantile QTQ Q (e.g. TT(e.g. (e.g. T the thethe10th 10th10th distribution of percentile),Y . Consequently, the dummy variable identifying whether the observed outcome, Yis is smaller , smaller percentile), percentile), percentile), the the the dummy dummy dummy variable variable variable identifying identifying identifying whether whether whether the thethe observed observed observed outcome, outcome, outcome, Y, Y Y , ,is is smaller smaller thanthan or or equalequal to to to the the sample sample quantile, quantile, and the density estimated using kernel methods at the In (9) than than or practice, or equal the equal RIF to the is the first sample sample quantile, estimated . quantile, a and as and and the the function the density density density of the estimated estimated estimated sample using using quantileusing kernel Qkernel kernel methods methods methods T (e.g. the 10th at at at thethe the point point point point of ofof the of the thethe sample sample sample sample quantile. quantile. quantile. quantile. In InIn theIn the thethe second second second second stage, stage, stage,stage, the the thethe estimated estimated estimated estimated RIF RIF RIF RIF is is is used is used used used as as aasas a a a dependent dependent dependentdependent percentile), the dummy variable identifying whether the observed outcome, Y, is smaller variable variable variable variable intoinin an in an an OLSan OLS OLSOLS regression regression regression regression thatthat that that is isis run is run runrun separately separately separately separately for for for thefor thethethe male-managed, male-managed, male-managed, male-managed, female-managed female-managed female-managed female-managed than or equal In practice, the the sample RIF plotis first quantile, estimated and as athe density function estimated of the sample using kernel quantile Qmethods at the T (e.g. the 10th andand and and pooled pooled pooled plot plot samples. samples. samples. The The The resulting resulting resulting parameters parameters parameters γ γM, MM γ , γ γ, γ, γ and and γ replace and γ γ * γ * replace replace * replace the the β β counterparts β counterparts the β counterparts counterparts ofpooled plot samples. The secondparameters resulting F and used the M F F F RIF * point the sample percentile), the dummy quantile. In the variable identifying stage, the estimated whether the observed is outcome, as a Ydependent , is smaller variable in an OLS than or equal to the regression that is run sample quantile, and separately the density for the male-managed, estimated using kernel female-managed methods at the and pooled plot samples. The resulting parameters γ , γ and γ * replace the β counterparts 4 4 4 4 point of the sample quantile. In the second stage, the estimated RIF is used as a dependent M F variable in an OLS regression that is run separately for the male-managed, female-managed and pooled plot samples. 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