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Monday 19 October 2015

Nigerian women make up 70% agric workforce – AfDB

The Nigeria Country Director, African Development Bank, Dr Ousmane Dore, said Nigerian women contributed close to 70 per cent of agricultural workforce yet got less of accruing returns.

Dore said this at the launching of African women in agriculture report titled: ‘Economic empowerment of African women through equitable participation in agricultural value chains’ on Monday in Abuja.

He said the report aimed at contributing to the economic empowerment of African women in agriculture, through identification and proffering of possible solutions to hindrances to women’s active participation in agricultural value chains.

“In spite of their (women) huge labour investment, productivity is low and they often have limited roles in decision making on the farms.

“Lack of ownership of land and other productive assets due to existing social norms has created a significant negative impact on the family income and the nation’s GDP at large,” Dore said.

He said that the bank recognised crucial role of women in economic growth and sustainability in Africa.

Dore said that the bank’s 10 years strategies (2012-2022) had placed high emphasis on gender equality and mainstreaming as prerequisites for African economic transformation.

He said that the report had examined how AfDB and partners could sustainably and proactively support African women by developing unique tailor-made projects for women-led and women-dominated businesses in agriculture.

Dore said that the entities included support for trade, investment and integration of African women in agriculture value chains.

“In Nigeria, women make up to 50 per cent of the total national population and so any meaningful development must take them into reckoning and fully integrated into the equation,” he added.

Special Envoy on Gender, Mrs Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi, said that agriculture was a critical sector on the continent, accounting for 60 per cent of employment.

Fraser-Moleketi said that women’s presence in agricultural labour force was significant at 50 per cent, therefore there was no better overlapping opportunity to support their economic empowerment and strengthen a critical sector on the continent.



SOURCE -: http://ift.tt/1LzjOzu

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