The Heat Never Bothered Me Anyway: Gender-Specific Response of Agricultural Labor to Climatic Shocks in Tanzania

by Yeyoung Lee, Carlo Azzarri and Claudia Ringler

 

As the magnitude, intensity and frequency of weather extremes increases uncertainty and risks to livelihoods in developing countries, substantial research has been developed on the detrimental effects of weather shocks on the poor and vulnerable facing acute food insecurity.

At the same time, empirical evidence on gender-specific impacts of such shocks on labor use in agriculture remains limited, although more studies focus on gender-differentiated experiences and responses. This is surprising as more than half of the adult population in Sub-Saharan Africa is engaged in agriculture, and farms are largely operated under rainfed conditions and with limited mechanization, making adequate labor input essential to producing food and generating incomes. To shed more light on this issue, we assessed the impact of heat stress on agricultural labor supply in Tanzania, and also examined sex-differentiated responses.

In a study published in Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy (AEPP), we examine gender-specific responses to heat stress on agricultural labor, disaggregated by key agricultural activities —including land preparation and planting, weeding and harvesting — for different households types, including dual-adult versus female-only households in Tanzania.

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