Discussion Paper No. 267 of 2021 on Gender, Access to Agricultural Resources and Food Security in Kenya
View/ Open
Publication Date
2021Author
Type
KIPPRA Publicationsviews
downloads
Metadata
Show full item recordBy
Kihiu, Evelyne
Abstract/ Overview
Food insecurity is a major development challenge in developing countries. In Kenya, the food poverty incidence remains high, as about 1 in every 3 individuals does not meet the minimum daily calorific requirement. Research points to possible gender-linked pathways through which agriculture influences food security in households. Gender considerations are especially important in the African context where there are broad divisions in the responsibilities between men and women and how they use their personal income in line with traditional cultures. To evaluate this pathway in the Kenyan context, we explore how women’s empowerment in agriculture compares to that of men, and its effects on household’s food security outcomes, measured using household’s food consumption scores. We find that approximately 28 per cent of households in Kenya are food insecure. We further show that women in agriculture are more disempowered relative to men. Women are mainly disempowered in: access to and decisions on agricultural credit, agricultural group membership, and asset ownership. Men are mainly disempowered in access to and decisions on agricultural credit and agricultural group membership. We find that women’s empowerment has a positive and significant effect on households’ food consumption scores, whereas the male’s empowerment effect is weaker and much lower. The dimensions of women’s empowerment that matter most in increasing household’s food consumption cost are input in productive decisions, control over use of income, and group membership. With men, the dimension that matters most in increasing household’s food consumption cost is access to and decisions on credit. The study results suggest that household food and nutrition security could be enhanced to a greater degree through interventions that promote women’s empowerment in agriculture.
Subject/ Keywords
Gender Diversity; Food Security; Agricultural Resources; Food and Nutrition; Agricultural Credit
Publisher
The Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA)Series
DP/267/2021Collections
- Discussion Papers [326]
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
National Agricultural Research System Policy 2012
Agricultural Sector Coordination Unit (ASCU) (Ministry of Agriculture, 2012)The policy objectives are: improving agricultural research policy framework; harmonizing and providing direction to national research for sustainable development; strengthening the legal, institutional and regulatory ... -
Sessional Paper No. 04 of 2011 on National Agricultural Sector Extension Policy (NASEP)
Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock & Fisheries (Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock & Fisheries, 2011)The agricultural sector provides a livelihood for about 80 percent of Kenya's population, most of whom are subsistence farmers in rural areas. The sector contributes about 24 per cent to the GDP and another 27 per cent ... -
Teacher Differences in Beliefs and Perceptions About Sustainable Agriculture: Influence on the Teaching of High School Agriculture Curriculum
Muma, Mathew; Martin, Robert; Shelley, Mack (Asian Social Science, 2022)The purpose of the study was to determine agriculture teacher differences in beliefs and perceptions about sustainable agriculture (SA) and the associations of these with the teaching of SA in the 12 states of the Midwest ...