female farmer |
According to a key finding in the United Nations Development Programme’s 2016 Africa Human Development Report (AfHDR) – Accelerating Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment in Africa –
gender inequality costs Sub-Saharan Africa about US $95 billion a year
and hampers the continent’s efforts for inclusive human development and
economic growth.
The report, which was launched globally on August 28, 2016 in Nairobi, Kenya, on the margins of the 6th Tokyo
International Conference on African Development (TICAD VI), was
presented on Monday, December 5, 2016 at a special event held on the
first day of the 2016 African Economic Conference (AEC) in Abuja, Nigeria.
The launch ceremony was
preceded by a panel discussion moderated by UNDP Africa Chief Economist
Ayodele Odusola. Panelists included Abdoulaye Mar Dieye, UNDP Assistant
Administrator and Regional Director for Africa; Edward Kallon, UNDP
Resident Coordinator and Resident Representative in Nigeria (incoming);
Angela Lusigi, UNDP Africa Strategic Advisor; Tunde Lawal, Director in
Nigeria’s Ministry of Budget and National Planning; Adhi Fatungai, UN
Women Deputy Director; and Barbara Barungi, African Development Bank
Lead Economist.
The report’s
findings which make gender equality an economic and development issue
are of significant relevance to the ongoing AEC, which is themed Feeding Africa: Towards Agro-Allied Industrialization for Inclusive Growth.
According to UNDP
Africa, agricultural transformation will require reforms that guarantee
equal and sustainable access to land and protect the rights of
marginalized women in Africa.
It also indicates
that African women hold 66 percent of all jobs in the non-agricultural
informal sector, spend 40 billion hours a year collecting water, yet
only make 70 cents for each dollar made by men.
Speaking to the
urgency of fully engaging and empowering African women, Abdoulaye Mar
Dieye said, “The continent continues to lose out in both economic and
development terms as long as the potential of women remains untapped.”
Speaking to
Nigeria’s efforts to advance gender equality, UNDP Resident
Representative Kallon added, “To advance women development, we need to
get women not to only participate actively in productive activities but
also to get fair reward for their labour.”
Angela Lusigi, a
leading contributor to the report, detailed its policy recommendations,
which call for, among other things, the adoption of legal reforms,
policies and programmes to advance women’s economic empowerment, and
promoting their access to ownership and management of assets and
resources.
“There is urgent
need to engage more women in decision making at all levels if the
continent is to realize its full potential,” said Lusigi.
The report also
advocates stronger alliances among governments, private sector, civil
society and development partners and the creation of an African Women
Investment Bank and Women Investment Windows in national and regional
development banks.
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