Did you know?
- Women are a huge part of the agricultural labor force in developing countries — up to 50% in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Women farmers are less productive than men because they have a harder time getting land, tools, credit and training.
- If women had the same access to these resources as men, they could increase farm yields by 20% to 30%.
- Increased agricultural output could reduce the number of hungry people in the world by up to 150 million.
By empowering rural women — with access to credit, the means to transport crops to market and, most fundamentally, the basic right to make decisions about the use of their land and resources — we help feed the world and spark important social advances.
Through its Feed the Future initiative and other programs, the United States works to improve agriculture in 12 partner countries in Central America, Africa and South Asia. Empowering women farmers is one successful strategy. And the results?
- In Tanzania, better irrigation means higher crop yields, and better access to markets equals higher farm income. Still on the agenda: increasing the nutritional value of crops and improving crop processing and storage.
- Follow @FeedtheFuture and visit its LinkedIn page to see how even modest investments produce big results. An earlier version of this article was published October 9, 2015.