« Back to Results

New Insights of the Role of Women in Agrifood Systems

Paper Session

Friday, Jan. 5, 2024 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM (CST)

Grand Hyatt, Mission B
Hosted By: Agricultural and Applied Economics Association
  • Chair: Alexis Villacis, Arizona State University

Cash Transfers Encourage Gendered Climate Adaptation Strategies in Mali

Valerie Mueller
,
Arizona State University
Melissa Hidrobo
,
IFPRI
Shalini Roy
,
IFPRI
Malick Dione
,
IFPRI
Anna Belli
,
Alliance Biodiversity–International Center for Tropical Agriculture

Abstract

Coping behaviors practiced by men and women in the household can reinforce inequities in capital endowments and labor force participation. While social assistance (SA) promotes the accumulation of household assets and savings, it remains unclear how these gains are distributed across household members. SA has the potential to empower women when climatic shocks change the relative return of women’s occupational mobility and agency over decisions. We leverage a randomized controlled trial in 90 communes of Mali to describe how SA promotes gendered adaptation strategies amidst an extreme rainfall (wet) shock. Beneficiary households reduce agricultural investments on land that is exclusively or jointly owned by women during a wet shock. In response, women reduce their supply of farming, yet household resources are used to protect their engagement in off-farm activities in the non-agricultural sector at the extensive and intensive margin. Increased investments in transport assets among beneficiary households exposed to a wet shock coincide with women reporting to have lower barriers to visiting the market and greater authority over whether the household should engage in non-farm activities. These findings suggest that SA may preserve women’s contribution to the structural transformation process in climate-vulnerable contexts.

Gender and Agricultural Aspirations: Evidence from Rwanda, Kenya, and Ecuador

Alexis Villacis
,
Arizona State University
Martin Tabe-Ojong
,
IFPRI
Selina Bruns
,
Norwich Institute for Sustainable Development
David Ortega
,
Michigan State University
Ashok Mishra
,
Arizona State University

Abstract

Despite the extensive scholarly focus on the aspirations of individuals across different dimensions,
the aspirations of rural women in the agricultural domain have largely been overlooked. This oversight is concerning given the growing migration of men seeking better employment opportunities outside rural areas. As a result, many women are assuming the principal role in agricultural activities, underscoring the need to understand their aspirations in this context. Using farm and household surveys, we gather nationally representative data from smallholder farmers in Ecuador, Kenya, and Rwanda and investigate the relationship between gender and aspirations in agriculture. Results reveal that gender does indeed play a significant role in shaping aspirations in agriculture, with 5 women exhibiting lower ambitions for the future. Given the unique challenges and barriers that affect women’s aspirations, these findings highlight the need for gender-sensitive policies and programs to promote a more inclusive and sustainable agricultural sector. We contribute to the growing body of research that highlights the importance of considering the intersection of aspirations with other social and psychological factors in order to understand what provides the best incentives for investments for the future.

Who Bears the Cost and Who Reaps the Benefits? Exploring the Role of Farm Size in Spouses’ Desired Fertility: Evidence from Tanzania

Catalina Herrera-Almanza
,
University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign
Aine Seitz McCarthy
,
Lewis & Clark College

Abstract

Fertility decline in Sub-Sahara Africa, particularly in rural areas, has been much slower than in other developing countries. Gaps in fertility preferences between men and women can determine households’ fertility outcomes as men desire more children than women and have more bargaining power in household decisions. Moreover, low population density and agricultural livelihoods that characterize Sub-Saharan Africa may depress the cost of high fertility due to the relatively high return to family farm labor. We investigate the role of farm size and land tenure in explaining husbands’ and wives’ fertility preference gaps and fertility outcomes in rural Tanzania. To address the potential endogeneity between households’ fertility and land investment decisions, we leverage the experimental variation of an informational family planning intervention that randomized the inclusion of husbands in household consultations about modern contraception. We explore the heterogeneous effects of the family planning intervention on fertility preferences and outcomes by farm size and land tenure. Preliminary work suggests that, before the intervention, land farm size was associated with a higher desired number of children for men but not women, substantially increasing the fertility preferences gap between husbands and wives. The intervention decreases the households’ costs of fertility control and has differentiated effects by households’ agricultural cultivated area and land acquisition at baseline. A greater understanding of the role of agricultural land in the gendered costs and benefits of fertility may help explain the stalled decline in fertility in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Women’s Associations: From Rights to Agroecological Markets

Trent Blare
,
University of Florida
Ross Borja
,
EkoRural Foundation
Maira Reimão
,
Villanova University
Guadalupe Padilla
,
EkoRural Foundation
Pedro Oyarzún
,
EkoRural Foundation

Abstract

Smallholder, indigenous farmers play a key role in food systems around the world. They apply traditional farming practices that ensure the sustainability of food production and at the same time, they meet the dietary demands of many urban consumers, especially for organic vegetables and dairy products. This study examines the position of women’s associations in the central Ecuadorian Andes, discussing their evolution from rights-based to market-oriented groups producing and selling agroecological products. We discuss how the history of these associations has led them to play a role in local politics and national policies around agriculture. We also highlight how these groups have succeeded both economically and socially, while also noting the challenges they face, as observed by themselves and outsiders. While the history of women’s agroecological production groups in Ecuador may be unique, as it is entrenched in indigenous rights movements, our results also point to opportunities and obstacles that are more common across small scale farmers. We highlight how these results deserve attention from both policymakers and agricultural
organizations.
JEL Classifications
  • A1 - General Economics