Briefing Papers Number 22, September 2013 | Page 7
Figure 4 Employment by Sector (as a share of total employment) by Gender
Total employment by sector (%), 2007
Agriculture
Male employment:
I Agriculture
I Industry
I Services
sub-Saharan
Africa
South Asia
Middle East &
North Africa
Female employment:
I Agriculture
I Industry
I Services
East Asia &
Pacific
Latin America &
Caribbean
Developed
Regions
0
25
50
75
100 0
25
50
75
100
UN Photo/John Isaac
Male employment:
I 1997 I 2007
CEE/CIS*
Female employment:
I 1997 I 2007
* Central and Eastern Europe/Commonwealth of Independent States. Source: United Nation’s Development Fund for Women, 2008.
when that income is controlled by men. But when women grams help quantify changes in women’s empowerment and
have bargaining power within the household, they are likely gender equality—is now being used to assess programs under
to help translate gains in income into food security and Feed the Future.
WEAI measures women’s roles in the agriculture sector
improvements in nutrition.23
Where gender gaps have closed quickly, it is due to evolu- and the extent of their engagement in five domains, each
tion in institutions and markets, both formal and informal; with indicators that are assessed individually. These are
how growth has played out; and how all these factors have production (e.g., the degree of autonomy a woman has in
interacted through household decisions. Removing discrimi- agricultural production); resources (e.g., access to credit
natory land and labor laws helps women farmers produce and equipment); income (e.g., control over expenditures);
more food. The combination of paying women equally; leadership (e.g., comfort speaking in public); and time (e.g.,
improving their access to tools, fertilizers,
and credit; and guaranteeing their right to
Figure 5 The Five Domains of Empowerment in the WEAI
own and access land will be a game-changer
in the fight against hunger and malnutrition.
Indicators
In addition, markets (which open new employInput in productive decisions
ment opportunities for women) and stronger
Autonomy in production
efforts to expand school systems and lower
Ownership of assets
their costs can influence household decisions
Purchase, sale, or transfer of assets
to the benefit of girls and young women.
Access to and decisions on credit
Production
Resources
Women’s empowerment (MDG 3) should
be fully included in both the push to reach
MDG targets before the deadline and the
framing of the post-2015 goals. To date, the
U.S. government has intentionally focused on
Income
Time
Control over use of income
women smallholder farmers in its approach to
reducing hunger and malnutrition. In 2012,
the International Food Policy Research InstiGroup member
Leadership
tute (IFPRI), USAID, and the Oxford Poverty
Speaking in public
and Human Development Initiative launched
Workload
the Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture
Leisure
Index (WEAI).24 The index—a tool for moniSource: www.feedthefuture.gov
toring how agricultural development prowww.bread.org
Bread for the World Institute 7