Exploring the Sources of the Agricultural Productivity Gender Gap : Evidence from Sri Lanka

Previous literature found overwhelming evidence of an agricultural gender gap in favor of male farmers. The case of Sri Lanka is unique as agricultural productivity, measured by yield per unit of land, is 25.4 percent higher among female farmers than male farmers. Using the nationally representative 2016 Sri Lanka Household Income and Expenditure Survey and the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition technique, the paper explores the sources of this unconditional female productivity advantage. The analysis finds that the smaller plot size cultivated by women is the leading source of female productivity advantage, reflecting the inverse relationship between cultivated area and productivity. However, this productivity advantage does not translate into women’s higher crop earnings. Another important source is the gendered pattern of crop mix as women tend to cultivate more high-value, export-oriented crops, while men are more likely to grow paddy with low productivity. Once controlling for plot size and crop mix, a conditional male productivity advantage emerges, reflecting men’s greater access to agricultural resources and potentially an unequal pattern of division of labor associated with social and gender norms. Policies to promote equitable access to resources and address other constraints to women’s productivity in agriculture continue to be important in promoting gender equality.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fukase, Emiko, Kim, Yeon Soo, Chiarella, Cristina
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022-04
Subjects:UNEQUAL DIVISION OF LABOR, SOCIAL NORMS, GENDER NORMS, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY BY GENDER, EQUITABLE ACCESS TO RESOURCES, WOMEN’S PRODUCTIVITY, MEN'S PRODUCTIVITY, GENDER EQUALITY PROMOTION, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY FACTORS, CROP MIX, ACCESS TO RESOURCES, GENDER EQUITY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099410104272220398/IDU01a2daff10ec0c04bc309bbe0aff53a71e3c1
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37366
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spelling dig-okr-10986373662022-05-04T05:10:39Z Exploring the Sources of the Agricultural Productivity Gender Gap : Evidence from Sri Lanka Fukase, Emiko Kim, Yeon Soo Chiarella, Cristina UNEQUAL DIVISION OF LABOR SOCIAL NORMS GENDER NORMS AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY BY GENDER EQUITABLE ACCESS TO RESOURCES WOMEN’S PRODUCTIVITY MEN'S PRODUCTIVITY GENDER EQUALITY PROMOTION AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY FACTORS CROP MIX ACCESS TO RESOURCES GENDER EQUITY Previous literature found overwhelming evidence of an agricultural gender gap in favor of male farmers. The case of Sri Lanka is unique as agricultural productivity, measured by yield per unit of land, is 25.4 percent higher among female farmers than male farmers. Using the nationally representative 2016 Sri Lanka Household Income and Expenditure Survey and the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition technique, the paper explores the sources of this unconditional female productivity advantage. The analysis finds that the smaller plot size cultivated by women is the leading source of female productivity advantage, reflecting the inverse relationship between cultivated area and productivity. However, this productivity advantage does not translate into women’s higher crop earnings. Another important source is the gendered pattern of crop mix as women tend to cultivate more high-value, export-oriented crops, while men are more likely to grow paddy with low productivity. Once controlling for plot size and crop mix, a conditional male productivity advantage emerges, reflecting men’s greater access to agricultural resources and potentially an unequal pattern of division of labor associated with social and gender norms. Policies to promote equitable access to resources and address other constraints to women’s productivity in agriculture continue to be important in promoting gender equality. 2022-05-03T13:29:05Z 2022-05-03T13:29:05Z 2022-04 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099410104272220398/IDU01a2daff10ec0c04bc309bbe0aff53a71e3c1 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37366 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Sri Lanka
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic UNEQUAL DIVISION OF LABOR
SOCIAL NORMS
GENDER NORMS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY BY GENDER
EQUITABLE ACCESS TO RESOURCES
WOMEN’S PRODUCTIVITY
MEN'S PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER EQUALITY PROMOTION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY FACTORS
CROP MIX
ACCESS TO RESOURCES
GENDER EQUITY
UNEQUAL DIVISION OF LABOR
SOCIAL NORMS
GENDER NORMS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY BY GENDER
EQUITABLE ACCESS TO RESOURCES
WOMEN’S PRODUCTIVITY
MEN'S PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER EQUALITY PROMOTION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY FACTORS
CROP MIX
ACCESS TO RESOURCES
GENDER EQUITY
spellingShingle UNEQUAL DIVISION OF LABOR
SOCIAL NORMS
GENDER NORMS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY BY GENDER
EQUITABLE ACCESS TO RESOURCES
WOMEN’S PRODUCTIVITY
MEN'S PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER EQUALITY PROMOTION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY FACTORS
CROP MIX
ACCESS TO RESOURCES
GENDER EQUITY
UNEQUAL DIVISION OF LABOR
SOCIAL NORMS
GENDER NORMS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY BY GENDER
EQUITABLE ACCESS TO RESOURCES
WOMEN’S PRODUCTIVITY
MEN'S PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER EQUALITY PROMOTION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY FACTORS
CROP MIX
ACCESS TO RESOURCES
GENDER EQUITY
Fukase, Emiko
Kim, Yeon Soo
Chiarella, Cristina
Exploring the Sources of the Agricultural Productivity Gender Gap : Evidence from Sri Lanka
description Previous literature found overwhelming evidence of an agricultural gender gap in favor of male farmers. The case of Sri Lanka is unique as agricultural productivity, measured by yield per unit of land, is 25.4 percent higher among female farmers than male farmers. Using the nationally representative 2016 Sri Lanka Household Income and Expenditure Survey and the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition technique, the paper explores the sources of this unconditional female productivity advantage. The analysis finds that the smaller plot size cultivated by women is the leading source of female productivity advantage, reflecting the inverse relationship between cultivated area and productivity. However, this productivity advantage does not translate into women’s higher crop earnings. Another important source is the gendered pattern of crop mix as women tend to cultivate more high-value, export-oriented crops, while men are more likely to grow paddy with low productivity. Once controlling for plot size and crop mix, a conditional male productivity advantage emerges, reflecting men’s greater access to agricultural resources and potentially an unequal pattern of division of labor associated with social and gender norms. Policies to promote equitable access to resources and address other constraints to women’s productivity in agriculture continue to be important in promoting gender equality.
format Working Paper
topic_facet UNEQUAL DIVISION OF LABOR
SOCIAL NORMS
GENDER NORMS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY BY GENDER
EQUITABLE ACCESS TO RESOURCES
WOMEN’S PRODUCTIVITY
MEN'S PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER EQUALITY PROMOTION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY FACTORS
CROP MIX
ACCESS TO RESOURCES
GENDER EQUITY
author Fukase, Emiko
Kim, Yeon Soo
Chiarella, Cristina
author_facet Fukase, Emiko
Kim, Yeon Soo
Chiarella, Cristina
author_sort Fukase, Emiko
title Exploring the Sources of the Agricultural Productivity Gender Gap : Evidence from Sri Lanka
title_short Exploring the Sources of the Agricultural Productivity Gender Gap : Evidence from Sri Lanka
title_full Exploring the Sources of the Agricultural Productivity Gender Gap : Evidence from Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Exploring the Sources of the Agricultural Productivity Gender Gap : Evidence from Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the Sources of the Agricultural Productivity Gender Gap : Evidence from Sri Lanka
title_sort exploring the sources of the agricultural productivity gender gap : evidence from sri lanka
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022-04
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099410104272220398/IDU01a2daff10ec0c04bc309bbe0aff53a71e3c1
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37366
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AT kimyeonsoo exploringthesourcesoftheagriculturalproductivitygendergapevidencefromsrilanka
AT chiarellacristina exploringthesourcesoftheagriculturalproductivitygendergapevidencefromsrilanka
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