Feminisation of Indian Agriculture Without Economic Empowerment

Context:

  • Indian agriculture is witnessing rapid feminisation of the workforce, with a sharp rise in women’s participation over the past decade.

  • However, this shift has not translated into proportional economic empowerment, as nearly half of women workers remain unpaid, exposing deep structural and gender-based inequities.

  • The issue gains importance amid declining agricultural GVA share and emerging opportunities from trade liberalisation and digital agriculture.

Key Highlights:

Rising Women’s Participation in Agriculture

  • Women’s employment in agriculture has increased by 135% in the last decade.

  • Women now constitute over 42% of India’s agricultural workforce.

  • This rise is largely driven by male outmigration from rural areas to non-farm employment, resulting in women replacing men in farm activities.

Unpaid and Invisible Labour

  • Nearly 50% of women agricultural workers are unpaid family labourers.

  • The number of unpaid women workers has increased 2.5 times in eight years, reaching 59.1 million.

  • This reinforces the pattern of feminisation of labour without feminisation of income.

Agriculture and Economic Decline

  • Agriculture’s share in national GVA declined from 15.3% (2017–18) to 14.4% (2024–25).

  • Rising female participation has coincided with falling sectoral returns, limiting income gains for women.

Structural Inequities Facing Women Farmers

  • Land Ownership:

    • Women own only 13–14% of land holdings, restricting their legal recognition as farmers.

  • Wage Gap:

    • Women earn 20–30% less than men for equivalent agricultural work.

  • Access Barriers:

    • Limited access to credit, insurance, government schemes, and decision-making platforms.

Role of Trade and Global Value Chains

  • The India–U.K. Free Trade Agreement is projected to increase Indian agricultural exports by 20% within three years.

  • Export-oriented sectors such as rice, spices, dairy, and value-added agri-products offer scope for women’s economic inclusion.

  • Integration into global value chains can shift women from unpaid labour to market-linked entrepreneurship.

Technology as an Enabler

  • Digital platforms like e-NAM, mobile-based advisories, and precision agriculture tools can:

    • Improve price discovery

    • Enable direct market access

    • Facilitate financial inclusion

  • However, challenges of digital literacy, smartphone access, and internet connectivity persist.

Best Practices and Emerging Models

  • Odisha’s Swayam Sampurna FPOs demonstrate how collectivisation and training enhance women’s market power.

  • L&T Finance’s Digital Sakhi programme shows the role of digital handholding in improving women farmers’ competitiveness.

  • These models highlight the importance of FPO-led, tech-enabled empowerment.

Reform Imperatives

  • Land reforms: Promote joint and individual land titles for women.

  • Labour recognition: Acknowledge women as independent farmers, not helpers.

  • Institutional access: Strengthen eligibility for credit, insurance, MSP procurement, and subsidies.

  • Skill and digital inclusion: Invest in gender-sensitive agri-extension systems.

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS Paper 1 – Indian Society

    • Prelims:

      • Feminisation of agriculture, gender roles in rural economy.

    • Mains:

      • Changing role of women in agriculture and persistence of patriarchal structures.

  • GS Paper 2 – Social Justice

    • Prelims:

      • Issues related to women, land rights, unpaid labour.

    • Mains:

      • Gender equity in access to resources, welfare schemes, and institutional credit.

  • GS Paper 3 – Indian Economy

    • Prelims:

      • GVA, FTA, FPO, agri-export trends.

    • Mains:

      • Structural transformation of agriculture, role of trade and technology in inclusive growth.

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