Women remain the backbone of the agricultural sector, yet they continue to face one of the greatest barriers to transforming their hard work into thriving businesses: limited access to finance.
When women account for nearly four out of every five people working in agriculture, expanding their access to affordable credit, investment capital and financial services is no longer simply a matter of equity. It is an economic necessity and a prerequisite for achieving lasting food security.
There is much to celebrate. Over the past decade, deliberate efforts to promote financial inclusion have yielded encouraging results. More women now have access to savings products, insurance and formal financial services than ever before.
Government-backed initiatives, development partners and financial institutions have introduced programmes aimed at supporting women farmers and women-led agribusinesses. These interventions have begun to narrow long-standing gaps.
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Equally important is the country's unwavering commitment to gender equality.
It has consistently demonstrated that women belong at the centre of national development, from ensuring one of the highest levels of female representation in Parliament and other leadership positions to integrating gender considerations into public policies.
That political commitment has created a strong foundation upon which economic empowerment must now be built.
Yet progress should not be mistaken for completion.
Many women still struggle to secure the larger loans needed to invest in mechanisation, irrigation, storage facilities, agro-processing, climate-smart technologies and commercial farming.
Traditional collateral requirements, repayment structures that do not reflect agricultural production cycles, and limited investment capital continue to constrain growth.
As a result, countless women remain trapped in low-productivity farming despite their enormous contribution to the sector.
Addressing these challenges requires a broader coalition of actors. Government must continue strengthening guarantee schemes, supporting innovative financing models and creating policies that encourage inclusive agricultural lending.
At the same time, the private sector, particularly banks, insurance companies, agribusinesses and investors, must step forward with products tailored to the realities of women farmers.
Flexible lending, asset-based financing, digital financial services and stronger value-chain partnerships can unlock opportunities that conventional banking has often overlooked.
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Empowering women in agriculture should not be viewed as a social obligation but as a smart investment.
Every additional hectare cultivated more efficiently, every agribusiness expanded and every woman empowered to move from subsistence to commercial production contributes to stronger food systems, higher household incomes and a more resilient economy.
The seeds of progress have already been planted. Ensuring women have the finance to grow is how those seeds will deliver a richer harvest for everyone.