Palacios-Lopez Amparo, Christiaensen Luc, Kilic Talip
Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS), Survey Unit, Development Data Group, The World Bank, United States.
Jobs Group, The World Bank, United States.
Food Policy. 2017 Feb;67:52-63. doi: 10.1016/j.foodpol.2016.09.017.
The contribution of women to labor in African agriculture is regularly quoted in the range of 60-80%. Using individual, plot-level labor input data from nationally representative household surveys across six Sub-Saharan African countries, this study estimates the average female labor share in crop production at 40%. It is slightly above 50% in Malawi, Tanzania, and Uganda, and substantially lower in Nigeria (37%), Ethiopia (29%), and Niger (24%). There are no systematic differences across crops and activities, but female labor shares tend to be higher in households where women own a larger share of the land and when they are more educated. Controlling for the gender and knowledge profile of the respondents does not meaningfully change the predicted female labor shares. The findings question prevailing assertions regarding substantial gains in aggregate crop output as a result of increasing female agricultural productivity.
非洲农业劳动力中女性的贡献通常被认为在60%-80%之间。本研究利用来自撒哈拉以南非洲六个国家具有全国代表性的家庭调查中的个体地块层面的劳动力投入数据,估计作物生产中女性劳动力的平均占比为40%。在马拉维、坦桑尼亚和乌干达略高于50%,而在尼日利亚(37%)、埃塞俄比亚(29%)和尼日尔(24%)则大幅降低。不同作物和活动之间没有系统性差异,但在女性拥有更大土地份额且受教育程度更高的家庭中,女性劳动力占比往往更高。控制受访者的性别和知识特征并不会显著改变预测的女性劳动力占比。这些发现对有关提高女性农业生产力会使作物总产量大幅增加的普遍观点提出了质疑。