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Gender equality in farming could add US$1 trillion to world economy, study reveals

  • ‘Making agrifood systems work better for women … would help reduce the number of food-insecure people by 45 million,’ report finds
  • In southern Asia, 71 per cent of women are employed in the sector, versus 47 per cent of men

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Sustainable and resilient agrifood systems depend on “closing gaps in generating equality and empowering women”, a study finds. Photo: dpa

Eliminating discrimination against women in agriculture could increase the size of the world economy and reduce hunger at a time when a record 345 million people are expected to face acute food insecurity.

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“Closing the gender gap in farm productivity and the wage gap in agrifood systems would increase global gross domestic product by 1 per cent, or nearly US$1 trillion,”according to the Food and Agriculture Organisation’s The Status of Women in Agrifood Systems report. “This would reduce global food insecurity by about 2 percentage points, reducing the number of food-insecure people by 45 million,” the study said.

The number of people facing hunger this year is more than double what it was in 2020, according to the World Food Programme. The crisis has been worsened by severe droughts, export bans, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and pandemic-induced supply-chain bottlenecks.

“By making agrifood systems work better for women, we can transform them to be more inclusive, more sustainable, more resilient,” expert says.
“By making agrifood systems work better for women, we can transform them to be more inclusive, more sustainable, more resilient,” expert says.

“Sustainable and resilient agrifood systems depend on closing gaps in generating equality and empowering women,” said Lauren M. Phillips, deputy director of the Inclusive Rural Transformation and Gender Equality division at FAO.

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