Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security

Women earn less than men, not only in agriculture, but across the broader agri-food system. Recent analyses by the World Bank found that, in Ethiopia and Nigeria, women working in agriculture earn a third less than men, with even larger gender gaps outside agriculture. This is partly due to discrimi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Thurlow, James, Levy, Stephanie
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/137096
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author Thurlow, James
Levy, Stephanie
author_browse Levy, Stephanie
Thurlow, James
author_facet Thurlow, James
Levy, Stephanie
author_sort Thurlow, James
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Women earn less than men, not only in agriculture, but across the broader agri-food system. Recent analyses by the World Bank found that, in Ethiopia and Nigeria, women working in agriculture earn a third less than men, with even larger gender gaps outside agriculture. This is partly due to discrimination in the workplace, but also women’s more-limited access to productive resources, including education and finance. The CGIAR Foresight initiative and the World Bank’s Gender Innovation Lab are using economywide models linked to household surveys to measure the impacts of closing gender-earnings gaps on national economies and agrifood systems and on household poverty, diet quality, and food security. Results from Ethiopia and Nigeria indicated that closing gender gaps in and beyond agriculture could raise national GDP by around 3% and reduce national poverty and hunger headcount rates by around 2 percentage points. This is equivalent to lifting 6 million women and men out of poverty across the two countries and reducing the risk of undernourishment for 2 million people. Benefits are not limited to women engaged in rural agriculture—the broader economy and population also benefits significantly. To our knowledge, this is the first collaboration between foresight modelers and household-impact evaluation experts to assess the broader benefits of closing gender gaps in developing countries. Our analysis provides new evidence on the importance of genderintentional policies and investments, and our modelbased approach allows for greater engagement with new decision-making audiences, such as the Ministries of Finance and Planning.
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spelling CGSpace1370962025-11-06T06:41:06Z Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security Thurlow, James Levy, Stephanie gender agriculture research gender relations Women earn less than men, not only in agriculture, but across the broader agri-food system. Recent analyses by the World Bank found that, in Ethiopia and Nigeria, women working in agriculture earn a third less than men, with even larger gender gaps outside agriculture. This is partly due to discrimination in the workplace, but also women’s more-limited access to productive resources, including education and finance. The CGIAR Foresight initiative and the World Bank’s Gender Innovation Lab are using economywide models linked to household surveys to measure the impacts of closing gender-earnings gaps on national economies and agrifood systems and on household poverty, diet quality, and food security. Results from Ethiopia and Nigeria indicated that closing gender gaps in and beyond agriculture could raise national GDP by around 3% and reduce national poverty and hunger headcount rates by around 2 percentage points. This is equivalent to lifting 6 million women and men out of poverty across the two countries and reducing the risk of undernourishment for 2 million people. Benefits are not limited to women engaged in rural agriculture—the broader economy and population also benefits significantly. To our knowledge, this is the first collaboration between foresight modelers and household-impact evaluation experts to assess the broader benefits of closing gender gaps in developing countries. Our analysis provides new evidence on the importance of genderintentional policies and investments, and our modelbased approach allows for greater engagement with new decision-making audiences, such as the Ministries of Finance and Planning. 2023-10-12 2024-01-04T12:47:23Z 2024-01-04T12:47:23Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/137096 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Thurlow, James; Levy, Stephanie. 2023. Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security. Presentation. Presented at the CGIAR GENDER Conference 'From Research to Impact: Towards just and resilient agri-food systems', New Delhi, India, 9-12 October 2023. International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/137096
spellingShingle gender
agriculture
research
gender relations
Thurlow, James
Levy, Stephanie
Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security
title Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security
title_full Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security
title_fullStr Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security
title_full_unstemmed Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security
title_short Closing gender gaps in developing countries: Impacts on poverty, diets and food security
title_sort closing gender gaps in developing countries impacts on poverty diets and food security
topic gender
agriculture
research
gender relations
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/137096
work_keys_str_mv AT thurlowjames closinggendergapsindevelopingcountriesimpactsonpovertydietsandfoodsecurity
AT levystephanie closinggendergapsindevelopingcountriesimpactsonpovertydietsandfoodsecurity