Briefing Paper

Despite Perceptions of Gender Equality, Africa’s Rural Women Bear Brunt of Economic Exclusion

Gender equality is both Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) No. 5 and a theme underpinning various other goals of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The agenda highlights the need for gender-equal access to education, ownership of resources, and engagement with information and communication technologies (ICTs). While African countries have made progress in narrowing gender gaps, particularly in access to employment and educational opportunities, gains have been inconsistent and modest. Barriers to economic inclusion not only follow gender lines, but also fall within genders, creating or exacerbating disparities between women from different demographic groups. Within African countries, one significant barrier tracks the urban-rural divide. When addressing barriers to economic inclusion, rural women’s lives merit greater attention. Past studies have found that rural women are less likely than urban women to have secure employment, are often unable to own or inherit land, and are disproportionately heading households as single parents. More often than not, these same women are cut off from digital connectivity that would enable them to pursue e-commerce opportunities or engage with community networks. Challenges in gaining economic agency for rural women can only be overcome with an understanding of where the disparities lie. Are rural women less likely to participate in the labour force, and if they do, are they less likely to have full-time employment? What share of ICTs is reaching rural women? How severe are the differences in educational outcomes for rural and urban women? Findings from Round 7 (2016/2018) Afrobarometer surveys in 34 African countries indicate large disparities in the economic agency of rural and urban women. While women in both settings perceive that their opportunities for employment, education, and land ownership equal those enjoyed by men, the reality is that women in rural areas are less likely to have formal schooling or participate in the labour market. Compared to urban women, rural women have strikingly less access to the Internet, less access to banking services, and less decision-making power in the household.