Abstract

Women make significant contribution to rice farming, processing, and marketing, but only have limited access to technical knowledge and technologies that can reduce their drudgery and labor bottlenecks, and provide them with additional income. Women also oversee the reproductive responsibilities. This paper comparatively investigates the role of women in rice farming across four countries (Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Madagascar, Sierra Leone) by examining the labor time distribution and its resulting income for men and women. It also assessed the determinants of their labor inputs in different rice farming environments. Results show that women and men spend on average 1 to 3 hours per day in rice production, making 45 to 135 working days of involvement in annual rice cultivation. Looking into the distribution of labor input provision in productive activities, it is found that apart from the specific activity of rice parboiling, which is practiced in certain countries mostly by women, men are the ones more engaged in rice farming. The specific labor input depends on several factors including the farm size, time spent on non-agricultural activities, and access to production equipment. These results provide the first evidence to that women farmers do not necessarily spend more time than men in rice cultivation in Africa, as it is often assumed. Certainly, across countries and systems, and also within male and female farmers categories, there are heterogenous labor inputs and associated determining factors and incomes. Male farmers earn higher income than female farmers in the different productive activities, except only for rice parboiling. This finding indicate that increasing labor input for rice would not result in higher income for female farmers. Female farmers might find better options by other agricultural activities such as food processing.

Highlights

  • Women constitute a significant resource in agriculture and the rural economy, as farmers, laborers, and entrepreneurs (SOFA Team and Doss, 2011)

  • It was claimed that women contribute 60–80% of agricultural labor in Sub-Saharan Africa [Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), 1995] or generally that agricultural work force contains a larger share of women than men (Mc Cullough, 2017)

  • This study provides the first evidence that female farmers do not necessarily spend more time than men in rice cultivation in Africa, as it is often assumed

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Summary

Introduction

Women constitute a significant resource in agriculture and the rural economy, as farmers, laborers, and entrepreneurs (SOFA Team and Doss, 2011). Evidences show that they comprise about 43% of the agricultural labor force (Doss, 2014) or between 24 and 56% depending on the country, Men and Women in Rice Farming in Africa crop, and activity domain as illustrated by Palacios-Lopez et al (2017). Women’s access to credit, technical, and market information, fertilizer or water is highly restricted (Vepa, 2005; Kinkingninhoun et al, 2008; Agarwal, 2015) These constraints in access to resources limit productivity, as evidenced by the lower yields realized by women. The consequence of gender discrimination in access to resources is that total output is lower than it would be if women had greater access to these resources, the wider implication being slower economic development (Khachaturyan and Peterson, 2018)

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