PARIS: Closing the gender gap in the agriculture and food system, where women still earn less than men, would add $1 trillion to the global economy, a UN report said Thursday.
The report, updating the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) 2011 study into the matter, found that women continue to occupy a “marginal” place in agrifood systems.
Women must “cope with work conditions that are often more difficult than those of men, in that they are confined to jobs that are casual, part-time, informal or low-skilled”, it said. Women represent more than half of the agricultural workforce in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, and just under half in Southeast Asia.
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Around the world, they are lagging behind when it comes to access to land, resources like fertilisers and seeds, financing or technology, while they are often more dependent on agriculture to survive.
“The share of men who hold the rights to property or are guaranteed rights of agricultural land is two times higher than that of women,” in more than 40 percent of countries that provide data on women’s land ownership, the FAO said.
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