Back to Search
Start Over
Are women less capable in managing crops? Insights from cotton production in Northern China
- Source :
- Feminist Economics
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Women’s performance in agriculture matters, as women are becoming increasingly involved in agricultural production worldwide. Many studies have demonstrated that women-led farms perform less well as a result of less access to production factors, but no studies focus on how women perform without this constraint. This study fills that gap by analyzing the case of cotton cropping, which is known for its high labor requirements, high production inputs, and need for technical knowledge. Using primary data collected in northern China over the 2006–9 period, it uses the concept of “Daily Crop Management” (DCM) and identifies DCM farms managed by women whose husbands were engaged in off-farm activities on a long-term basis. The study finds that one-third of all farms were female-DCM farms, that these were smaller than those of their male counterparts but had equal access to production factors and achieved equal if not better technical and economic performances.
- Subjects :
- Economics and Econometrics
Economic growth
Exploitation agricole familiale
050204 development studies
Factors of production
Taille de l'exploitation agricole
Gender Studies
Agricultural science
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
E12 - Travail et emploi
0502 economics and business
Production (economics)
E50 - Sociologie rurale
050207 economics
Agricultural productivity
Crop management
China
Genre (femmes/hommes)
Travail
Constraint (mathematics)
Gossypium
Performance professionelle
business.industry
Femme
05 social sciences
E80 - Économie familiale et artisanale
Analyse économique
General Business, Management and Accounting
E20 - Organisation, administration et gestion des entreprises ou exploitations agricoles
Travailleur agricole
Agriculture
Féminisation
Exploitation agricole
Business
Cropping
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Feminist Economics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....df03674a04f2d0ab22ba881d8297ca0c