Women's Contribution to Agriculture in India
The significance of women's labor in India's agricultural economy was highlighted during the International Year of the Woman Farmer. However, despite their central role, women's remuneration remains low and stagnant. Official statistics fail to accurately represent the scale and type of women's participation in agriculture due to the informal and intermittent nature of their work.
Challenges in Capturing Women's Labor
- Inadequate Surveys: Large-scale labor surveys often miss capturing women's work as it is typically home or farm-based, unpaid, and seasonal.
- Rise in Workforce Participation: Women's workforce participation in rural India increased from 35% in 2011-12 to 46.5% in 2023-24, still lower than the global average of 57%-63%.
Employment Statistics
- Self-Employment: The proportion of self-employed rural women increased from 60% to 73% between 2011-12 and 2023-24, indicating a lack of wage employment opportunities.
- Agricultural Workforce: In 2023-24, there were 117.6 million women working in agriculture, comprising self-employed, hired, and regular workers.
Sectoral Analysis
In-depth studies from selected villages show women's vital role in various agricultural sectors:
- Crop Production: Women account for a significant portion of labor, with estimates showing women contribute 41-61% of combined family and hired labor in surveyed villages.
- Livestock Rearing: Women primarily handle livestock tasks, with around 40 million women engaged, spending about 2 hours per animal daily.
- Wage Labor: Women's participation in casual labor for crop production varies widely, from 16% to 71% in different regions.
Remuneration and Gender Wage Gap
- Wage Rates: Women earn less than ₹300 per day, with a significant wage gap compared to men (less than 50% of male wages in Tamil Nadu).
- Inflation-Adjusted Wages: Little to no increase in women's wages when adjusted for inflation over the past decade.
- Livestock Earnings: Women earn around ₹100 daily from livestock, significantly lower than wages in crop production.
Conclusion and Challenges
- Women constitute about half of the agricultural workforce yet face low wages and a large gender wage gap.
- Only 10% of rural women own land, limiting their economic empowerment.
- The state has inadequately recorded women's contributions and failed to ensure fair wages and rights.