Gendered Roles in Agrarian Transition: A Study of Lowland Rice Farming in Lao PDR
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What are the differences, if any, between how men and women choose to adopt new technology?
- What are the differences between men and women, if any, in strategies and attitudes to farming and related activities?
- What are the differences between men and women, if any, in the ability to generate income and engage with farming markets?
2. Gendered Economic Transition in Lao PDR
3. Methodology
3.1. Survey Data
3.2. Choice of Participants and Survey Administration
3.3. Analysis of Survey Data
4. Results
4.1. Gender-Related Differences in Age and Educational Level
4.2. Gender-Related Differences in the Embrace of New Practices
- Men tended to adopt more new practices, but this difference was not statistically significant.
- Women tended to participate more often in trials of new practices, but this difference was not statistically significant.
- Women who adopted new practices more often reported that the adopted practices were useful, and this difference was statistically significant.
- Women who adopted new practices tended to adopt more practices than men, and this difference was statistically significant.
- A total of 17% of women who adopted new practices compared with 11% of male adopters reported to have entirely abandoned all their new practices, and this difference was statistically significant.
4.3. Gender-Related Differences in Strategy and Attitudes towards Rice Selling
- (1)
- Maximize farm income: As head of the household, I need to feed my family and make some extra money. I plan to have surplus rice for sale every year and I sell animals when I need extra money. Sometimes I get an off-farm job to make a bit more money.
- (2)
- Maximize off-farm income: As head of the household, it is my job to maximize labour time for off-farm jobs because this maximizes our income. It is not worth our effort to increase rice production much more than what we need to feed my family. Rice, animals, and cash crops are important, but off-farm jobs are the best way to maximize income.
- (3)
- Not head of household.
- (1)
- Modern farmer: I farm like most other farmers around here. There must be a very good reason for me to do something very different from what most other farmers do.
- (2)
- Pragmatist: I am interested in what other farmers do but if it suits me, I will do things differently to other farmers.
- (3)
- Traditionalist: I farm in the way that my parents and grandparents did. I do not want to change because farming in this way is part of who I am.
- (1)
- “Feed family: I am a farmer. I grow rice mainly to feed my family and sell any surplus.
- (2)
- Sell surplus: I am a farmer. I grow rice to feed my family and sell the surplus. I am always looking for opportunities to improve my income.
- (3)
- Entrepreneur: I am a farmer and entrepreneur. I grow rice to feed my family and for income. I am interested in anything that might help me make more money from growing rice.”
4.4. Gender-Related Differences in Household Income
- (1)
- Access to the market price for rice. “I can easily get the local market price for rice”. Stronger agreement with this statement was correlated with a higher household income. This factor was significantly associated with gender, with women being more likely to disagree with this statement.
- (2)
- Access to multiple buyers. “If I want to sell rice, I have several buyers available”. An agreement with this statement was generally associated with a higher household income and vice versa. The average access to multiple buyers was not statistically different for men and women; however, a statistically significant larger proportion of women reported strong disagreement with the statement that they “have access to multiple buyers”, indicating a small but important group that was particularly vulnerable.
- (3)
- Access to a fair price for seeds and other inputs. There was a statistically significant difference between women and men in response to question “I know I pay a fair price for seed, fertilizer and pesticide”, with women more likely to agree with this statement.
- (4)
- Priority for selling livestock. “How much do you prioritize selling livestock?” A higher stated priority of selling livestock was generally associated with a higher household income and vice versa. Women reported on average a lower priority for selling livestock.
- (5)
- Future-orientation. “When I think about improving my farm the most that I look ahead is x”. Participants responded to timeframes from “this season” to “more than three years”. Individual future orientation was strongly associated with household income. The level of future orientation revealed an interesting set of nuances. Most men and women considered productivity benefits season by season, and rarely did participants consider benefits a year or two into the future. However, on average women reported a higher level of longer-term future-orientation (>3 years); and the individuals with this long-term view reported the lowest average household incomes. As many as 15% of women looked more than 3 years into the future, compared to only 6% of the men. On the other hand, men reported a higher proportion of future-orientation in the middle range of one or two years—and the individuals with such a future-orientation reported the highest average household income.
5. Discussion
5.1. Gender-Related Differences in Education Level
5.2. Gender-Related Differences in the Embrace of New Practices
5.3. Gender-Related Differences in Livelihoods Strategy and Attitudes towards Farming
5.4. Gender-Related Differences in Economic Outcomes and Access to Market
5.5. Implications of Our Results for Research and Policy
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Summary Statistic | Women | Men | p-Value of Chi-Square Test |
---|---|---|---|
Percentage of respondents who have adopted at least one technology (% NumberOfTechs > 0) | 43% | 42% | 0.06. |
Average number of technologies adopted (NumberOfTechs) | 0.79 | 0.97 | |
Percentage involved in testing new practices (ProjectInvolvement) | 48% | 43% | 0.17 |
Average number of technologies still being used (StillUsing) | 0.93 | 0.88 | <0.001 *** |
Average number of useful technologies per adopter (BeingUseful) | 1.9 | 1.5 | <0.001 *** |
Percentage of adopters who are using at least one useful technology (BeingUseful) | 83% | 89% |
Question | Response | Female Respondents (%) | Male Respondents (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Attitude towards selling rice | Feed family | 9% | 12% |
Entrepreneur | 65% | 52% | |
Sell surplus | 27% | 36% | |
Openness to change | Modern farmer | 23% | 29% |
Pragmatist | 49% | 42% | |
Traditionalist | 28% | 29% | |
Household farming strategy * | Feed family | 10% | 19% |
Maximize farm income | 27% | 44% | |
Maximize off-farm income | 62% | 36% |
Question | Men—Average Score | Women—Average Score | p-Value (for Chi-Square Test Against Gender) a |
---|---|---|---|
Access to market price for rice | 0.33 | 0.28 | <0.01 *** |
Access to multiple buyers | 0.86 | 0.86 | <0.01 *** |
Access to fair price when selling rice | 0.11 | 0.24 | <0.01 *** |
Access to a fair price for seed and other inputs | 0.23 | 0.35 | <0.01 *** |
Priority of selling livestock | 0.84 | 0.77 | 0.02 * |
Future-orientation | 0.63 | 0.84 | <0.01 *** |
Factor | Estimate | Pr (>|t|) | % of Deviance Explained |
---|---|---|---|
Future orientation | −0.18 | 2.27 × 10−5 *** | 2.9% |
Access to multiple buyers | 0.067 | 0.014 * | 2.4% |
Access to market price | 0.054 | 0.033 * | 0.7% |
Household farmer strategy: Max. farm income | 0.080 | 0.027 * | 1.7% |
Household farmer strategy: Max. off-farm income | 0.058 | 0.10 | |
Household Farmer strategy: Feed family | 0 | N/A | |
Openness to change: Pragmatist | 0.017 | 0.53. | 0.7% |
Openness to change: Modern farmer | 0 | N/A | |
Openness to change: Traditionalist | −0.043 | 0.14 | |
Attitude towards selling rice: Feed the family | 0 | N/A | 0.6% |
Attitude towards selling rice: Sell surplus | −0.066 | 0.069. | |
Attitude towards selling rice: Entrepreneur | −0.11 | 0.0030 ** | |
Gender: Male | 0.053 | 0.032 * | 0.5% |
Gender: Female | 0 | N/A | |
PriorityFarmIncome | −0.092 | 0.029 * | 0.4% |
PriorityOffFarmIncome | 0.060 | 0.078. | 0.4% |
PriorityLivestock | 0.0018 | 0.96 | 0% |
Education | 0.0144 | 0.61 | 0% |
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Moglia, M.; Alexander, K.S.; Larson, S.; -Dray, A.; Greenhalgh, G.; Thammavong, P.; Thephavanh, M.; Case, P. Gendered Roles in Agrarian Transition: A Study of Lowland Rice Farming in Lao PDR. Sustainability 2020, 12, 5403. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135403
Moglia M, Alexander KS, Larson S, -Dray A, Greenhalgh G, Thammavong P, Thephavanh M, Case P. Gendered Roles in Agrarian Transition: A Study of Lowland Rice Farming in Lao PDR. Sustainability. 2020; 12(13):5403. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135403
Chicago/Turabian StyleMoglia, Magnus, Kim S. Alexander, Silva Larson, Anne (Giger)-Dray, Garry Greenhalgh, Phommath Thammavong, Manithaythip Thephavanh, and Peter Case. 2020. "Gendered Roles in Agrarian Transition: A Study of Lowland Rice Farming in Lao PDR" Sustainability 12, no. 13: 5403. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135403
APA StyleMoglia, M., Alexander, K. S., Larson, S., -Dray, A., Greenhalgh, G., Thammavong, P., Thephavanh, M., & Case, P. (2020). Gendered Roles in Agrarian Transition: A Study of Lowland Rice Farming in Lao PDR. Sustainability, 12(13), 5403. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135403