Hiwot Menkir Agri. Econ (Womens Work Lkad)
Hiwot Menkir Agri. Econ (Womens Work Lkad)
Hiwot Menkir Agri. Econ (Womens Work Lkad)
The author was born in Addis Ababa on December 28,1973. After completing high school,
she joined the then Alemaya University of Agriculture in September 1994 and graduated with
From September 1998 to September 1999 she worked in a consultancy firm called WASS
International.
In October 1999, she joined the department of Agricultural Economics of Alemaya University
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Acknowledgment
First of all, profound thanks to my major advisor Dr. Desta Hamito, my co-advisor Dr.
Wudnesh Hailu, and to my previous advisor Professor Farah Hassan for their constructive
My special thanks go to W/o Zeleka Girma and Mr. S.E Robi for funding my education and
I would like to extend my greatest appreciation to Dr. Belay Kassa (Academic Vice President
of Alemaya University), Dr. Tekalegn Mamo, Ato Habte Mariam Kassa, Ato Zewge Lemma
(Yem Wereda WIBS coordinator), Ato Menker Girma, and Ato Zewdu Girma who provided
me their constant encouragement and help in completing my study. In fact, without their
unreserved assistance, this research work would have not been a reality.
Finally my thanks go to my family and friends who supported me throughout the research
work.
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Table of Contents
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH................................................................................................... I
ACKNOWLEDGMENT.........................................................................................................II
LIST OF TABLES...................................................................................................................V
ABSTRACT.......................................................................................................................VII
1. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................1
1.1. BACKGROUND AND JUSTIFICATION...................................................................................1
1.2. STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM ..........................................................................................3
1.3. OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY...............................................................................................5
1.4. SCOPE OF THE STUDY........................................................................................................6
1.5. SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY............................................................................................6
1.6 LIMITATION OF THE S TUDY................................................................................................7
2 REVIEW OF LITERATURE...............................................................................................8
2.I. GENERAL SETTING ............................................................................................................8
2.2 WOMEN IN D EVELOPMENT............................................................................................... 11
2.3 WOMEN IN FOOD PRODUCTION ........................................................................................ 12
2.4 AREA BASED DEVELOPMENT P ROGRAMS........................................................................ 13
3 METHODOLOGY ..............................................................................................................17
3.1 TYPES AND METHODS OF DATA COLLECTION.................................................................. 17
3.2 S ITE S ELECTION AND S AMPLING...................................................................................... 18
3.3. ANALYSIS OF D ATA ........................................................................................................ 20
4 DESCRIPTION OF THE STUDY AREA.........................................................................23
4.1 GENERAL BACKGROUND ................................................................................................. 23
4.2 P HYSICAL FEATURES ....................................................................................................... 24
4.3 S OCIO-E CONOMIC FEATURES ........................................................................................... 25
4.3.1 Land and Livestock Ownership ...............................................................................25
4.4 INCOME GENERATION...................................................................................................... 28
4.5 P RODUCTION PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED IN THE S TUDY AREAS ...................................... 28
4.5.1 The problems of Marketing in the Study Areas .......................................................29
4.6 TASKS OF WOMEN AND INTRODUCTION OF TECHNOLOGIES IN THE STUDY AREAS.......... 31
5 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION..........................................................................................32
5.1 ACTIVITIES IDENTIFIED .................................................................................................... 32
5.1.1 Household Activities ................................................................................................32
5.1.2 ENSET plantation ....................................................................................................34
5.1.3 Enset Processing......................................................................................................37
5.1.4 Backyard Gardening................................................................................................39
5.1.5 Farm Activities .........................................................................................................41
5.1.6 The Gender Division of Labor in the Study Areas...................................................42
5.2 BURDENSOME TASKS....................................................................................................... 43
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5.3 IMPACT OF INTRODUCED TECHNOLOGIES ........................................................................ 43
5.3.1 Water Fetching ........................................................................................................43
5.3.2. Grinding Grain .......................................................................................................45
5.3.3 Enset Processing......................................................................................................46
5.3.4 Production Functions for the Two Areas.................................................................50
6 SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION..........................................56
6.1 S UMMARY AND CONCLUSION .......................................................................................... 56
6.2 R ECOMMENDATION.......................................................................................................... 59
REFERENCES .......................................................................................................................61
APPENDICES.........................................................................................................................65
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List of Tables
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List of Abbreviations
CERTWID : Center for Research, Training, and Information for women in Development
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Abstract
Women’s Workload and their role in Agricultural Production in Wereda and non-
Wereda Basic Service Areas -The Case of Yem
By Hiywot Menker
A study was conducted in Yem special wereda of the Southern Nations and Nationalities
Peoples Regional State. It emphasized on the effect of introduction of labor and time saving
technologies on the pattern of allocation of time by women for household activities, backyard
gardening, enset processing and plantation, and farming activities.
The t statistic and regression were used to analyze and summarize the data .Results from the
t-test revealed that there was a significant difference in time use with respect to grinding
grain, fetching of water and production of roots and vegetables between WIBS, where the
intervention was made and NWIBS, without any of the intervention. The result of the multiple
regression analysis showed that in WIBS male labor and farm size were found to be the most
important factors in influencing output, whereas in NWIBS it was only male labor.
The elasticities of the factors influencing output were found to be 0.57, 0.11, 0.04, -0.05, 0.38
for male labor, female labor, number of enset plants processed per year, livestock ownership
and farm land ownership respectively in WIBS. In NWIBS, the elasticities were 0.46 for male
labor, 0.32 for female labor,-0.04 for number of enset processed in a year, -0.09 for livestock
ownership, and .0.038 for farm land ownership.
Households in WIBS were found more efficient in allocating the resources like male labor and
farm land. Whereas in both of the areas, female labor was found to be used inefficiently
implying that the spare time gained as a result of the intervention was not applied to
agricultural activities as expected.
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1. Introduction
Agriculture is the mainstay of the Ethiopian Economy and women are the backbone of the
food production system (MOPED and UNICEF, 1994). Out of the total subsistence
agricultural production, they are responsible for about 50%. As some reports indicate women
constitute 50% of the total population and contribute around 65% of the labor-force in
agriculture (TGE and UNICEF, 1993a).
Social definitions of which tasks should be carried out by men or women vary from one
society, region, class or ethnic group to another. This variability indicates that the division of
labor is determined not by the physical differences between sexes, but by the social
definitions of proper relation ship between women and men (Shmink et al. , 1988).
The condition of the Ethiopian women, especially in rural areas, is appalling. They perform
laborious household tasks, such as grain grinding, fuel-wood and water fetching. These
activities sap much of their energie s, which could have otherwise been spent in more
productive farming activities. In fact, as statistics show women’s labor-force participation rate
is much lower than that of men and they are generally crowded in low-skilled, low -paying
activities (GOE, 1995).
Even though women participate in many production areas like food production, animal
husbandry, storage, processing and marketing of food stuff, their farming activities take place
on an ever shrinking resource base with extremely primitive technology and with severely
stretched time resources. The competition for their time comes from arduous and time-
consuming household tasks, on the one hand, and their need to accommodate additional
activities, which will provide them with cash earnings in an increasingly monetized rural
economy, on the other (UNESCO, 1985).
We can see nowadays that subsistence production of women or women’s poverty is attracting
much attention. This is because of the deterioration of the rural sector to the point where a
growing number of Third World Countries have become net importers of food stuff and the
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uncontrollable migration to urban centers, which creates several problems with politically
unsettling implications.
So far, there is ample evidence that most efforts towards increasing the productivity of the
peasant sector and the real incomes of rural producers have been accompanied by an
intensification of labor within the peasant household. This has primarily increased women’s
workloads in the absence of any measures to alleviate their already extremely heavy domestic
burden typically involving several hours a day fetching water and pounding grain among
other things. It, therefore, stands to reason that very little can be achieved in terms of
increasing rural women’s labor productivity without taking into account (a) the exact
modalities of their participation in agricultural work and (b) the intrinsic limitations imposed
on such work by other time-consuming household tasks.
A number of time-budget studies indicate that tas ks such as water fetching, fuel collection,
food processing and preparation can account for the better part of an adult woman’s extremely
long working day. Allocating resources to a better sanitation, easy access to water points,
cheap sources of fuel, improved means of porterage and transportation would have immediate
beneficial consequences, as would the reduction of laborious food-processing operations
through the introduction of labor- and time–saving appropriate technologies (UNESCO,
1985).
In view of this, UNICEF, in collaboration with the TGE studied the situation of women in
Ethiopia and selected the most vulnerable areas. One of the goals in the cooperation between
the TGE and UNESCO for the advancement of women was the introduction of some means
by which women would be able to reduce their heavy work load and also raise their incomes.
And this goal was planned to be achieved through wereda integrated basic services (WIBS)
program whose aim is to provide services which are sustainable and replicable through the
adoption of low -cost, affordable, community–managed technologies, and by means of
community empowerment as well as full participation of women (TGE and UNICEF, 1994a).
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1.2. Statement of the Problem
Women’s role in the society can be divide d into three main categories; productive,
reproductive and community organizing (Dejene, 1999).
Generally, women support the subsistence economy by growing food crops for the family,
bringing up children, fetching water and firewood- in short, doing all daily tasks, which keep
the family going. But because these tasks do not involve money, they are not seen as “work”
and are subsequently undervalued (UNESCO, 1985).
Women producers are relatively unproductive, typically have less access than men to labor-
saving technologies and other productive resources. The development efforts of the last three
decades, which tried to solve the issue using women in development (WID) approach,
revealed that women’s work remained unrecognized, undervalued and that women generally
have less access to development resources. If development is conceived as economic growth,
without improving the productivity of women, the objective would not be realized (MOPED
and UNICEF, 1994).
The country program of cooperation covering the period 1994-99 and signed on 25
November, 1994 between the Government of Ethiopia and UNICEF, had objectives that
evolved from the 1993 report on the situation of children and women. It states that “there is an
abundance of empirical evidence, which points to excessive hardships that are being
pressures. The plight of the women has been exacerbated, in particular, by poverty, war and
drought mostly acting in combinatio n” (TGE and UNICEF, 1993a). To address its objectives,
the program of cooperation had two broad strategies. One was through building and
expanding nation-wide service delivery, and the other was through supporting integrated basic
The main aim of the Wereda Integrated Basic Service (WIBS) programs was to promote and
introduce technologies that are simple, affordable, durable and manageable by communities.
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Communities were assisted in improving food processing and preservation methods, which
contribute to the easing of the work load of women and reducing the demand on their time.
The extra time available can be used for productive purposes. There were four major project
activities and these include:
According to the Master Plan of Operations (MPO), sixty-four weredas (later reduced to fifty-
seven) were to be covered by the WIBS program. Sixteen weredas were targeted for the first
year, Yem being one of them. The weredas have been chosen on the basis of their poverty
level and according to criteria, which address the priority needs of children and women. The
criteria for this selection were established by both the Government and UNICEF (TGE and
UNICEF, 1994b).
Thus study aimed at assessing the contribution of the introduced technologies such as
grinding mills, and water points constructed at a near distance and enset processor, to the
improvement in agricultural production and reduction of the time used by women in
comparison to the situation where such interventions had not taken place. And the study was
conducted in Yem special Wereda of the SNNPRS.
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1.3. Objectives of the Study
The overall objective of the study was to assess the performance of women and labor
allocation patterns in WIBS and NWIBS areas and observe the difference in the level of
burden shouldered by women, and agricultural productivity.
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1.4. Scope of the Study
Out of the total of 33 kebeles only 8 were taken, where, in the 6 kebeles there were grinding
mill, water points and enset processors, where as in the other 2 there were none of the
technologies. The 8 kebeles selected practiced crop farming most of the time than livestock
rearing, marketing by women, etc. This was because, in the study, attention was given to
improved technology, which leads to high productivity in crop produc tion than to greater
saving of energy in domestic labor. Emphasis was given to a season with less rain in order to
capture the difference between the two sites with respect to water availability. And only male -
headed households were selected for the sample.
Many studies show that women’s work has remained unrecognized and undervalued. As a
result, women have been underserved or ignored by development planning though they have
important roles and responsibilities in the development activities. Women over-worked as
they are, have often been left worse off by past development interventions ( Winrock, 2001;
CERTWID, 1997 a; OSSREA, 1997). In this study, it was foreseen that knowing the impact
of the WIBS on participating women could enable policy makers to use the scheme as a
model or allow UNICEF, the Government of Ethiopia, and Winrock International Ethiopia to
modify the project for possible use in other areas. That is, the results of this study were
expected to portray the exact situation of women and help correct the imbalances, and
recognize the vital linkage between women’s status and the implementation of sustainable
development initiatives.
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1.6 Limitation of the Study
The study has some limitations and these are listed below.
• The indirect effect of women’s participation like provision of food in the time of
• When time of farming activities, water fetching and grinding coincide, women try
to complete these tasks by working all night and early in the morning to spare time
for the farming. As a result, during the day they are tired and are not effective in the
performance of the activities. These aspects have not been considered in comparing
• Only man-hour unit was taken as a basis in considering the level of burdens of
different activities but not the energy that was spent on each of the tasks.
• Time spent on preparation of food for debo , holidays and special days were not
calculated.
• Comparison between the two study areas was done only on one year basis.
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2 Review of Literature
In Ethiopia, as in many African Countries, women are the backbone of the food production
system. It is estimated that around 65% of the total labor expended on farming activities in
Ethiopia is contributed by women (TGE and UNICEF, 1993a).
Ethiopian women are involved in the entire gamut of agricultural activities. They are involved
in different activities like seed cleaning, land preparation, sowing, weeding, hoeing, scaring
birds, harvesting, preparation of threshing field, collection and piling farm products,
winnowing, transporting, storing, food preparation labor assistance in the field, crop storage
container-making and care of stored seeds. Study made in three regions of Ethiopia (Amhara,
Tigray and SNNPRS) showed that about 50 %, 47-58%, and 34% of the total labor and time
inputs in crop production are contributed by women (Wudnesh, 2000).
In the peak agricultural season, women spend up to 10 hours per day in the field. The period
of heaviest workload on women, (pre-harvest and harvest) is generally the period of lowest
household food availability and the physical strain on them is thus tremendous. Women’s role
in marketing is also demanding. They usually supplement the family’s income by selling the
produce over which they have control, such as butter, cheese, eggs, and chicken. They spend
several hours per week on marketing activities.
There are also tasks that involve women by virtue of their accepted roles as providers of daily
meals for the family. The activities include grinding and pounding of grains and other food
stuff, the drying and storing of food, preparing the food for eating and the fetching of water
and firewood. The last two activities alone can consume 6 to 8 hours each day (UNICEF,
1989; EARO, 2000). As reports indicate, women in rural Ethiopia commonly work for 15
hours a day (TGE and UNICEF, 1993a). Daily routine activities of women in south Gondar
zone also showed that they work in general about 18 hours a day (Winrock International
Ethiopia, 2000).
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In general women’s tasks can be categorized under the triple roles of women- productive,
reproductive, and community functions.
The productive functions involve production of goods and services essential for family
sustenance. They involve work related to food and nutrition, water, fuel wood, income,
market, etc. Unlike men’s production and productivity (registered in nationa l accounts and
planned for in allocations of resources for increasing productivity) which have
market/exchange value, women’s production is almost exclusively for immediate family
consumption (use value) (OSSREA, 1997).
The reproductive functions involve women’s contribution to and needs associated with child
bearing, rearing and family sustenance. These functions are integral to women’s roles as
mothers.
There have been some attempts to document women’s work in Ethiopia. Some studies
showed, enset processing, which is one of the household tasks in some parts of Ethiopia,
consumes much of the women’s labor and time (MOA,1996).
Enset is cloned, planted and replanted by men but harvested and processed solely by women.
Not only do wome n play a larger role in those activities than men, but dealing with enset
takes up a large proportion of most women’s time, both when the plants are being harvested
and during the preparation for meals.
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matured enset, than the improved one (IAR, 1993). Therefore, any changes in the technology
of enset processing is likely to affect women enormously and change their workload
proportionally more than that of men’s.
In 1980, Eva Poluha studied what Ethiopian women do in and out of the household, the tools
they use and the constraints they face while engaged in socially productive work. By doing
the research in one wereda each in Gojjam and Arsi, Poluha concluded that women were
overloaded with household and farm work and recommended various interventions to ease
their burden.
Many researches made showed that women are intensively engaged in farming, harvesting,
and post harvest activities and due to fuel wood and water problems spend a substantial
amount of their time in water and fuel wood collection. As a result of this most women put
fuel wood collection and water houling problems as their most difficult activities followed by
grinding, transporting and other processing tasks. Women’s preferences in technology were
identified as being fuel saving devices, water hauling devices, carts, processing devices, and
post harvest devices (Winrock International Ethiopia, 2001).
The relation between community time resources and community values was studied in order
to create a better understanding between development planners and administrators, and
community members in two sites in Gojjam, one having model producers’ co-operatives and
the other without. Household interviews and observations were used to determine how men
and women allocate their time. It was found that although both sexes were active at least for
12 hours a day, men had twice as much time as women for personal use and social functions
(Solomon, 1986).
The role of women and children in household energy supply for Addis Ababa was st udied in
1985. And it was estimated that about 73,000 households earn their living by collecting and
selling fuel wood. As the author said, women spent 9 to 12 hours in fuel collection, covered
up to 35 kilometers and carried loads amounting up to 77 kilograms while suffering many
physical hardships (Fikrte, 1990).
Women’s role in livestock related food and fuel production activities was also studied in four
villages in Sidamo using interviews. It was shown that on the average, women spent over two
10
hours daily on such activities and had entire responsibility for those activities, which involved
production and sale of milk products (UNICEF, 1990).
Studies were also made which show gender differentials in agricultural productivity among
small-holders in Ada, Lume, and Gimbichu weredas of the central highlands. And results
showed that, with respect to some resources, female -headed households were more efficient
than male-headed households. But the overall analysis revealed that male-headed households
were found to be more productive. The study also showed that there were differences between
male and female -households in terms of capital endowments and access to factors and inputs
(IDR,1999).
Rural women, who make up the majority of women in developing countries, have become
prime targets for policy makers who are variously concerned with their high fertility,
illiteracy, low labor productivity and their seeming ability to avail themselves for more
advanced technology or modes of orga nization (UNESCO, 1985). Nevertheless, the
development efforts of the last three decades which tried to solve the issues of women using
the WID approach, when viewed through the gender ”lens”, revealed that women have always
been left behind in development programs. In particular, their role has been limited to
household chores and little or no economic value was given to their contributions
(CERTWID, 1997a).
Not only that, the past development interventions too often have left women worse off relative
to men, than they were prior to development efforts (MOPED and UNICEF, 1994). This
shows that development in the real sense will come only if women participate in the
productive sphere (CERTWID, 1997b). The multiple roles women play and their
contributions to the productive sector is not reflected in national statistics. One major reason
is that only income-generating activities (field work in particular) are covered in the surveys,
while house work and other activities are often excluded (Dejene, 1989).
The difficulty lies in the interrelatedness between women’s productive, reproductive and
maintenance roles, the close identification of women’s production activities with household
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consumption and the gender based division of labor (ONCCP, REWA and UNICEF, 1988).
The modern view of women is that of women who can successfully juggle a career with the
management of healthy and harmonious home, and actively participate in community affairs.
Even though women’s tasks at home are tiresome and time taking, their role should not be
limited to the family environment alone. However, activities outside the home should be
undertaken only when all household duties have been fulfilled. If the home is still unsettled, it
is better not to be involved with outside activities, particularly when these activities are
obligatory functions (Deri, 1989). Therefore, in the integration of women in rural
development, development planning must attempt to provide ways to ease the burden of
women’s domestic labor through a variety of public projects (Dessalegn, 1989).
Concern with both the politically destabilizing impact of the Green Revolution’s distributional
effect and the chronic state of food production in many Third World countries, gave rise to
preoccupations about rural poverty and distributional issues, which found expression in the
World Bank’s most recent policies vis-à-vis the poorer rural sectors (UNESCO, 1985). This
heralded the second phase of the Green Revolution, namely the adaptation of credit
technology packages for peasant use and the setting up of supervised small- holder projects
and out-grower schemes. Others involve food production schemes or area development
projects, where there is no relocation but the provision of “supervised “ credit and agricultural
extension to small holders. This places much of the risk on the farmer, and is a cheaper way to
obtain the labor of an entire family. Another important aspect is that the mode of exploitation
of household labor through the intensification of labor without any development of the
productive forces might have reached its intrinsic limits.
It is against this background that one must understand the imperative of increasing
productivity of peasant labor, in general and in production of food crops, in particular. In
many parts of Africa, subsistence agriculture has virtually become a female task, and as in
other parts of the Third World, male migration has created a feminization of the subsistence
sector. This effectively means increasing the labor productivity of women at all cost. In
projects which do involve new inputs as a means of increasing labor productivities, the fact
that small holders can only rely on family labor means intolerable work loads for women in
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the absence of any measures to alleviate their already extremely heavy domestic burden
(UNESCO, 1985).
The improvement of the status of women requires action at the national, regional, and local
levels and within families. In Ethiopia, both the TGE and UNICEF, have acknowledged the
need to strengthen women-related activities within the framework of the regular country
program development exercise as part of the efforts being made to improve the situations of
women. The activity of UNICEF is an area based development program, which is WIBS, with
special focus on women and children in different areas of the country.
The WIBS program was based upon the experiences of Rural Integrated Basic Services
(RIBS). RIBS was an area based development strategy, which provided basic services in the
then Bale, West-Gojjam, Illubabor, East Wellega, East Shoa, North Shoa, Keffa/Benchi,
Tigray and North-Omo administrative zones. RIBS sought to involve communities in needs
identification and prioritization. It assisted the government in development planning at local,
wereda, zonal and regional levels by supporting viable economic activities meant to generate
13
income and promoting the development and dissemination of appropriate technologies that
were intended to reduce the burden, and save time and energy of women.
The WIBS program was the major component of the 4th TGE and UNICEF country program
(1995-1999), where major emphasis was placed on women. Like UIBS (Urban Integrated
Basic Services) and RIBS (Rural Integrated Basic Services), WIBS (Wereda Integrated Basic
Services) was also an area based Integrated development program, but its approach focused at
wereda/community level. WIBS was planned to cover 64 weredas (both rural and urban)
within the period 1995-1999. Selection was made from all regions based on priority needs of
regions and sustainability of the programs. The strategy of WIBS includes among others, the
provision of services, which are sustainable, replicable through low cost, affordable, and
community managed technologies (TGE and UNICEF, 1994a).
Studies made by comparing RIBS and non-RIBS PAs in Gojjam and Illubabor showed that
there was no significant difference between the two areas in time use. Among the reasons
given, the main one was lack of close consultation with local women in the design of the
appropriate technology for reducing drudgery and on enhancing productivity. The
recommendations given in the study for the PAs under the study were:
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WIBS, which had the capacity and immense potential to mobilize beneficiary communities to
participate in needs identification, program planning, monitoring and evaluations was
expected to create a better situation for women in Ethiopia.
Interventions were also made by different agencies and institutions in different parts of
Ethiopia.
Basic Metals Industries and Engineering Agency (BMEIA) has been developing technologies
on post harvest, water, transport, and energy. It has also developed a mold for making plastic
water pots for women (Winrock International, 2001).
The Melkasa Agricultural Mechanization Research Center, has done some work on
developing technologies for ENSET processor, raw planters and weeders, threshers, shellers
and storage for onions and other crops.
The Home Science and Technology Department of the DEBUB University in Awassa has
incorporated appropriate technologies into its curricula with the aim of equipping students
with the required knowledge on technologies. Technologies demonstrated by the department
include, biogas cookers, fireless cookers, smokeless ovens, food driers, improved stoves,
improved mud brick rural model homes and technologies that bring about improvement in the
home environment.
Selam Technical and Vocational Center, an NGO, which has been active in the development
of technologies has been making multi crop threshers, grinding mills, butter churners,
beehives and smokers, honey extractors and transport technologies such as trailers and carts.
Similarly a project, which has been making research to develop fuel saving cook stoves since
1989 is the Cooking Efficiency Improvement and New Fuels Marketing Project (CEINFMP).
With financial input from the World Bank, the project has produced an improved charcoal
stove, a biomass stove for injera baking, and a low cost electric stove. The improved charcoal
stove, commonly known as lakech has a fuel efficiency of 25-30% over the traditional square
metal stove, while the biomass stove for injera, commonly known as Mirt has an efficiency of
45-50% over the traditional three stone injera stove(Winrock International, 2001).
15
A comparative analysis of the technology development process in two rural technology
centers and a private producer in Addis was made. It was found out that technology
development process of the two rural technology centers were similar while that of the private
producers showed slight variation. Technology development was found, among others, to be
gender neutral and biased towards the ones who can afford. While women were implicitly
assumed to benefit from the technologies developed to alleviate the workload and increase the
productivity of the farmer, no special reference was made to the particular needs and priorities
of women (Winrock International, 2001).
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3 Methodology
To collect information that was relevant to the objectives of the research, the following
methods were employed.
• Questionnaires designed to solicit information about, the type of activities performed by
men and women in the field and at home, manpower requirement of each job and the
frequency of doing the job in a year, were prepared and administered to participating
households. The questionnaires were filled by enumerators by interviewing farmers. The
enumerators were selected on the basis of completion of grade twelve, having a good
knowledge of the locality and speaking the Yem language in addition to Amharic and
having a good experience in data collection. Before the enumerators commenced, a
training on how to administer the questionnaire and how to register the responses was
given.
• Individual and focus group discussions have also been held. These were designed to get
explanations for the results obtained from the formal survey, and to clarify some points
that were not clear.
• Actual field observations were also made and this was meant to reduce the possibility of
missing some vital information and also to cross check the data found in the formal survey.
• Secondary data were gathered from the Wereda Bureau of Agriculture, WIBS bureau in
the wereda and Winrock International Ethiopia offices.
• Pilot survey was also conducted on households from WIBS and NWIBS sites.
activities
17
• technology used to perform different activities
Yem special wereda has a total of 33 kebeles or peasant associations (CSA, 1998). In this
wereda, the Bureau of Agriculture, UNICEF and Winrock Internationl Ethiopia had
introduced different labor and time saving technologies. These were: grinding mills; water
pumps and enset processors. The first two had been provided by UNICEF. There were also
grinding mills owned by private individuals. Enset processors had been provided by Bureau
of Agriculture of the wereda and by Winrock International Ethiopia. Out of the 33 kebeles, 6
kebeles used all the three technologies, whereas the remaining kebeles, used one or two or
From the 6 kebeles, 34 households, which adopted the technology fully were selected for the
study. From the kebeles with none of the interventions, two kebeles, which were similar with
the kebeles with the intervention, were selected. The two different groups had the same
feeding habit, household work, backyard garden, types of crops grown, average size of land
holding, fertilizer use, average number of livestock, access to income generating activities,
proximity to the market, access to transportation, etc. Their difference lies in the fact that one
was with the interventions and the other without. The two groups were compared with respect
The kebeles, which used the three technologies w ere Deri-ereto, Gesoni, Wongacho, Shemina
Metelow, Gurumna Angeri, and Ediya. Zemida and Meleka, the counterpart kebeles were
those without the interventions, but matching with the above kebeles in other aspects.
18
The total number of households in the study areas was 1,663 and 848 for WIBS and NWIBS
areas, respectively (CSA, 1998). But the number of households, which used the three
technologies together, had not been recorded by any of the bureaus in the area. In NWIBS
areas, the households, which traveled for a distance of one kilometer or more to fetch water,
were the ones incorporated in the sample. This was because in WIBS areas, the water points
were developed at a near distance, which was less than one kilometer to reduce time as well
as energy.
Stratified random sampling was used in the selection of the households in both areas. The
basis for stratification being distance from the nearest water point. The strata for both WIBS
NWIBS
distance from water 2 1.3 1
points(time for round
trip in hours)
19
3.3. Analysis of Data
Simple analytical tools such as percentages and averages were employed to describe and
To find out if there is a significant mean difference between WIBS and NWIBS sites, t-test
was used in the analysis. The formula for the test was:
X1 − X 2
t=
σˆ X1 − X2
( n1 − 1) S1 + (n 2 − 1) S 2 2
2
Where σˆ 2 =
n1 + n2 − 2
σˆ 2 σˆ 2
σˆ X 1 − X 2 = +
n1 n2
Cobb-Douglas production function was also estimated in order to capture the difference in
labor productivities in farming activities between the two study areas (Dillon and Heady,
1998).
a ß ? ? ?
The Cobb Douglas production function of the form P = ? V W X Y Z was
employed
where
V= male labor hour in farming activities;
W= female labor hour in farming activities;
X= number of enset plants processed in the year;
Y= livestock ownership;
Z= farm land ownership (ha);
P= production level of cereals and pulses (qt), and
W is a constant.
20
Since a productivity figure of any level involves sampling errors, the differences in the
productivities were evaluated in terms of errors attached to each elasticity coefficients. This
was done by using simple statistical tests, which included the following steps. First, the
elasticity of production necessary to give a marginal product in WIBS equal to the marginal
product of the same resource in NWIBS was computed. The aim was to compare Ew , the
elasticity actually derived for WIBS with Ew1, the elasticity necessary to give equal
YNW RW
EW 1 = ENW
YW RNW
E W =elasticity of WIBS
YNW RW 2
S = S 2W + S NW
YW RNW
Where:
2
S W =the variance for a particular factor in WIBS
21
EW − E NW (YNW RW ) YW R NW )
t=
YNW RW 2 2
SW 2 + ( ) S NW
YW RNW
To define the labor force of different age groups the man power unit (mpu)was used. The
MPU is defined as a physically and mentally healthy, average person. A person defined as a
full man power unit works eight man power hours (mph) per day (Wudnesh, 1991).
According to Wudnesh (1991) the labor input of household members in each activity was
calculated as follows:
MHY=T*N*F
Where
MHY=man-hour/household/year
T=time taken to do the job/day, week or month
N=number of people engaged in the job, and
F=frequency per year
22
4 Description of the Study Area
Yem is a special wereda, which is found in the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples
Regional State (SNNPRS). The wereda capital Fofa is 588 Km from the regional capital
Awassa. About 70 percent of the wereda has temperate climate, while 25 percent is lowland
and the remaining 5 percent is highland. The perennial rivers in the wereda are Bore, Aya,
Saja, Laften and Tegri. The main wild lives found in the area are greater kudu, wild pig,
The population of the wereda is 61,843, of which 31,361 are males and 30,482 are females.
The total number of households is 12,568, the average household size being 4.9. Out of these,
about 82.7 percent is male - headed and the remaining being female -headed (TGE and
UNICEF, 1995). About 43.5 % of the total population is single while 49.64, 1.88 and 4.72%
Gross enrollment ratios of the wereda population in primary school, junior secondary school
and senior secondary school are 24.4, 20.5 and 4.6 respectively (CSA, 1998).
The people of the wereda are mostly of Yemisa ethnic origin and constitute about 96 percent
of the total population. The remaining four percent of the population is composed of different
ethnic groups like Amhara, Meri, Chara, Oromo, Kolo, Gurage-sodo, Gurage-Sebat Bet,
Hadiya and Zeyise. Around 65 percent of the Yemisa population are followers of Orthodox
23
The entire population of the wereda is sedentary. All of the peasant associations in the wereda
do not use improved seeds, farm implements and irrigation, while all of them use commercial
fertilizers. The major food crops and cereals grown in the area are enset, teff, wheat, maize,
peas, horse beans, barley, sorghum, beans, and nigger seed. The major types of fruits grown
are banana, peach, papaya, guava and lemon while the vegetables consist of sweet potato and
Ethiopian kale.
Out of the total number of households, about 92.2 percent own some type of livestock, while
7.4 percent do not own any. The average number of livestock per household in the wereda is
2.3, 0.12, 1.14, 0.84, 0.02, and 1.36 for cattle, equine, sheep, goat, camel and poultry,
respectively. The wereda does not have all weather roads and air service. It does not have also
postal, telephone, banking, and electricity services (TGE and UNICEF, 1995).
The wereda has an annual mean temperature, which ranges between 12-30°C. The annual rain
fall average is 600-1800 mm. The area has two rainy seasons- Belg and Meher.
Yem special wereda is located between 1000-3200 m.a.s.l. About 65% of the area has rugged
surface, 20% mountains, 9% valleys, 3% plateau, 2% swamps and 1% covered with water.
The major soil types of the area are red and brown/black clay loams, which account for 5 %
and 25 % respectively. The land use pattern of the area is that 61 % of the total area of 41,133
ha is used for farming, whereas grazing land, forest, bushes, rocky land and settlement
account for 23.74%, 11.95% and 0.17%, respectively (Etalemahu, et al, 1998).
24
4.3 Socio-Economic Features
Livestock constitutes an essential part of the farming system. It provides the only means of
production (traction power) and biological fertilizer (manure). In addition to its major role in
crop production, it is the major form of investment and asset reserve in times of crop failure.
Number of Livestock
25
Table 3 shows that the average size of livestock ownership by each households is 9.2 and 8.4
In the study area enset is the predominant staple food, which occupies the largest share of
homestead production. Teff, ba rley, wheat, and peas are also common in the area.
As it can be seen from Table 4, the average land size allocated for cereals and pulses is 0.65
and 0.66 ha while for enset and back-yard gardening, it is 0.24 and 0.2 ha., for NWIBS and
WIBS, respectively.
26
Table 4. Land Ownership in WIBS and NWIBS
Land Size (ha)
Enset and
Household Pulses and Backyard Household Pulses and Enset and Backyard
number (NWIBS) Cereals Gardening number (WIBS) Cereals Gardening
1 0.50 0.31 1 0.60 0.165
2 0.75 0.125 2 0.50 0.250
3 0.50 0.25 3 0.75 0.250
4 0.50 0.178 4 1.30 0.125
5 0.75 0.31 5 0.50 0.250
6 0.125 0.25 6 1.00 0.250
7 0.50 0.20 7 0.50 0.250
8 1.00 0.178 8 0.5 0.250
9 0.50 0.50 9 0.875 0.370
10 0.50 0.125 10 0.75 0.250
11 0.75 0.30 11 0.60 0.500
12 0.50 0.25 12 0.70 0.125
13 0.50 0.11 13 0.60 0.125
14 0.50 0.20 14 0.70 0.125
15 0.25 0.125 15 1.00 0.381
16 0.375 0.125 16 0.20 0.312
17 0.50 0.125 17 0.20 0.100
27
4.4 Income Generation
In the study area, the households generate income through selling horticultural products from
their gardens. They sell cabbage, white onion, red onion, beetroot, cauliflower, potatoes, and
Ethiopian kale. But almost all households grow cabbage, which is the main plant used for
making wet (a sauce which is eaten with injera (food-stuff), bread , or kocho ). Other products,
which they sell, are jiba (a mat made from the outer part of enset stem), shorodo (a container
made from the outer part of enset), bulla (food stuff prepared from enset) and few amounts of
kocho (food stuff prepared from enset) and zenbil (a structure used to hold things). They also
sell cereals and pulses. But because the prices are too low, the money they get is not sufficient
And it can be observed that women have control over the sales of items, which have small
values.
Several production related problems have been identified. Some of these are listed below.
• increased burden due to fertilizer use: Sometimes, the male farmers go to far places
to pick coffee to cover fertilizer costs if the sale of crops and animals does not cover
it;
• sometimes, the farmers sell some of the fertilizer because they needed cash badly
• farmers harvest only once i.e., they only produce during the meher season.
Individuals do not produce in belg season for fear of death or of becoming poor, or
28
• failure in timely harvesting as a result of which post harvest losses are high;
• high fertilizer prices: the prices of fertilizers increase every time making it difficult
All the above problems increase the burden of women, because they are the farmers and also
they look for other income genera tion mechanisms to sustain the household.
In the PAs selected, the households mostly sell their products in 4 market places. These are:
Fofa, Toba, Deri, and Kesheli. From Deri to Fofa it takes 2 hours on foot, from Toba to Fofa 3
hours, and from Kesheli to Fofa, 2 hours. The markets operate two days a week in Fofa
(Thursdays and Sundays), while they operate once a week in the other three market places of
Different products appear in the market like cereals, pulses, bulla, kocho, jiba , shorodo ,
The reasons why the people go to the market places are one for financial purposes, i.e., to sell
their products for money, which in turn is used to pay for fertilizers, to buy things for
household consumption, and the other, for social purposes. The male farmers go to the market
to drink and enjoy with their friends, while couples go for honeymooning after their wedding.
Even though a certain market may be relatively far away for a household as compared to
another market, they would go to that market to meet their need, at the expense of their time
29
and energy. They also sell their products in different markets because of the following
reasons:
The household’s frequency to go to the market depends, mostly among other factors, on
amount of product, the purchasing power, amount of goods left from each market trip, and
expectation of price change, which leads to selling of small amount every time a trip is taken
to the marketplace. Women’s length of stay at the market place appears to be influenced by
the speed with which their product is sold, and the intensity of social activities undertaken
The most important marketing problems observed in the study areas according to personal
interviews include:
• All households harvest and sell at the same time, which makes the price of the product
to fall
• Fertilizer repayments are required at the time of harvest, which is one of the reasons to
• The supply of the products is high relative to the dema nd, i.e., most of the time the
buyers, who do not produce themselves are few in number and among the farmers it is
• To sell long after the harvest time is over, is difficult because of absence of good
storage facilities, the low amount of produce, the obligation of fertilizer repayments
and the absence of tradition to thresh and store on time. The gotera (local bin) is used
to store seeds for the next plantations and mostly to store maize.
30
Fair market transaction takes place before and after the period of the obligation time to repay
for the fertilizers. At other times, farmers sell at very low prices.
Women in the study areas are engaged in different activities. These are: household activities,
backyard gardening, social affairs, marketing of agricultural produce, and processing of enset.
They participate in agricultural activities directly and indirectly by providing food to people
involved in the activities like the case of debo (a labor pool system in which people call each
To ease the tasks of women, grinding mills, water points, and enset processors were
introduced in some of the study areas. Water is fetched by paying some amount of money (ten
cents per jerrican with a capacity of twenty liters). Water fetching in the study area is carried
out by women, children and sometimes by men. Grain grinding in WIBS areas is performed
Enset processing is the most common activity in the study areas. Both in WIBS and NWIBS
areas processing can be done alone, together with family members or by dado (labor pool
system where neighbors call each other to perform activities). But since the task is tiresome, it
is mostly done by a group of women. Both the wereda Bureau of Agriculture and Winrock
International Ethiopia, have introduced enset processors. The former disseminated the
technology on sale basis (Birr 183 per processor) while the latter demonstrated the
technology. With respect to enset processing, the two sites practiced different methods. In the
NWIBS areas, the people used the traditional way of processing, while in the WIBS sites,
31
5 Results and Discussion
Several activities which are performed by rural farmers have been identified. These are
grouped into five major headings: house hold activities, enset plantation, enset processing,
Household activities include kocho baking, injera baking, preparing wet, grain grinding, water
fetching, fuel-wood fetching, washing clothes, and cleaning barns. Out of all these, the ones,
which are performed daily are kocho baking, wet making and water fetching, whereas fuel-
wood collection and barn cleaning are performed daily or once in two days depending on the
livestock owned and availability of fuel-wood. The others, injera baking, grain grinding,
washing clothes are done weekly, once or twice a month according to the habit of each
household.
The man-hours spent to perform each activity were calculated by using the following formula.
MHY=T*N*F
Where
MHY = man-hour/household/year
T = time taken to do the job/day, week or month
N = number of people engaged in the job, and
F = frequency per year
32
Table 5 Average man-hour spent on household activities in WIBS and NWIBS sites
Water fetching 28 72 18 82
Fuelwood 41 59 71 29
fetching
Cloth washing 38 62 31 69
Barn Cleaning 28 72 36 64
Total 23 77 19 81
Source: Field survey
As the figures in both sites show kocho baking, injera baking and wet cooking were entirely
women’s job in the area, while the other activities were shared between the two sexes and still
the proportion is high for women. As data from appendix 1 show, from all the activities, fuel-
wood fetching consumed much of women’s time due to the fact that the distance traveled was
too long and the frequency of fetching was between once a day to once in two days.
33
Kocho baking also consumed much of their time because it is prepared and consumed daily.
Kocho is eaten with wet which also needs to be prepared daily and so wet making also took
much time. Water fetching occurred frequently because the water point was near to the
households. Grain grinding also occurred mostly once in a week or twice by going to the near
by grinding mill.
In WIBS study areas, fuel-wood fetching ranked first in consuming man hour. Kocho baking,
wet making, water fetching, washing clothes, barn cleaning, injera baking and grain grinding
consumed time in decreasing order. In NWIBS area, water fetching, kocho baking, fuel-wood
fetching, grain grinding, wet making, cloth washing, barn cleaning and injera baking took
When we take water fetching in NWIBS area, there was on the average a need for 936.4 man
power unit (mpu) per year per household, whereas in the WIBS area the need decreased to
422.21. Similarly, in grinding grain, we can observe the same trend, i.e., the value decreased
Enset has been in use in Ethiopia from antiquity. Its users are mostly found in the central,
south, south western and western parts of the country. In other places it is commonly known
as koba. enset, which is considered as a root crop, is similar to banana and it is sometimes
called false banana. Its scientific name is Enset ventericosum. Although wild species of enset
are distributed throughout much of central, eastern and southern Africa (as well as Asia), it is
34
Eenset ventericosum is widely cultivated in Ethiopia as food and fiber crop. Over 20 percent
of Ethiopia’s population depend on this plant. The importance of enset is considerably high in
that it is commonly grown in densely populated areas of the country where it is known to give
higher yield per unit area and hence capable of sustaining a large population than cereals. In
addition, enset is grown as an insurance crop for the peasant against drought and as a means
to earn cash income. This crop is also important because of its good level of tolerance to
drought and frost. The processed form of enset, kocho , has a very long storage life, which
The ownership of large enset plants and a diverse number of clones is the major criterion for
farmers in categorizing households according to different wealth status. Even though the
households with large number of enset plants and sufficient clonal diversity are food secure,
they are not necessarily secure in terms of income and livelihood. So the ownership of other
resources such as livestock and land for the production of other crops for additional income is
Enset grows at an altitude between 1,600 and 3,100 meters above sea level. In addition to its
use as food, it is useful in reducing soil erosion and keeps the fertility of the soil. Under good
soil, air and health conditions, enset can attain a height of about 10 meters and circumference
Different products are produced from enset. The major products are kocho and bulla , which
are used for consumption by the people in the area. They are prepared from the leaf sheath
and the corm. When processing enset, the fiber that remains is used for making mat
commonly known as jibba, and basket like structure known as shorodo in the surrounding
35
areas. The leaves of the enset plants are used for wrapping the kocho , when it is being baked.
While considering the use of enset it is worth mentioning its composition. Kocho and bulla ,
the two most important products contain a high amount of calorie, calcium, carbohydrate, and
moiture. They also conta in protein, fat and iron in small amounts (MOA, 1989).
Enset plantation involves land preparation, seedlings preparation (enset propagation) and
planting, hoeing, manuring, digging holes and transplanting seedlings. During propagation,
enset plants of four to six years are selected. They are uprooted, the pseudostem severed to
20-30 cm is cored and filled with dry humus. The corm is replanted after three to five days
close to homesteads. Within four to eight weeks as many as 40 to 200 new sprouts begin to
appear depending on the enset cloned, the soil and climate. These sprouts are kept near the
Table 6 Total and average man-hours spent in enset plantation in WIBS and NWIBS sites
Land preparation 96 4 70 30
Seedling plantation 95 5 99 1
Hoeing 63 37 62 38
Manuring 50 50 60 40
Digging holes 93 7 99 1
Transplanting seedlin gs 22 8 99 1
Total 71 29 71 29
* Source: Field survey
36
Table 6 shows that about 71% and 29% of the work is done by men and women, , in WIBS
Enset processing involves selection of enset, decortica ting, squeezing, pulverizing the root,
mixing the residual with the pulverized root, burying the mixture for sometimes for
fermentation and removing unwanted liquid from the fermented dough and finally cutting the
Different materials are used in the process. Except for the knife used for cutting the leaves and
for felling the plant, the other objects are wooden tools.
From focus group interview and observation, the following information about enset
processing was gathered. At harvest, leaves and older leaf sheathes are first removed from the
selected plants. The internal leaf sheaths are separated from the pseudo stem down to the true
stem, which is about 20 cm section between corm and pseudostem. Then the true stem is
separated from the underground corm. The concave side of the leaf sheath is peeled and cut
into pieces of about one meter length and split lengthwise in order to shorten the leaf sheath to
a workable size. Then the leaf sheath is decorticated using a locally made bamboo scraper
while the leaf sheath is held on an incline against a wooden plank. Women sit on the ground
and use one leg to hold the leaf sheaths in place, while in the improved method of processing
women decorticate standing. While decorticating the liquid bulla is allowed to flow into a pit
layered with enset leaves where it will remain for two or three days until the a solid
component settles to the bottom. The remaining kocho will be kept covered with enset leaves
for a week in a specially prepared place. At the same time, the corm (which is uprooted) is
37
pulverized by pounding with a dented wooden stick until only a small layer is left intact to
serve as a bowl to hold the product. Then herbs and a small amount of kocho are added to the
pulverized corm and the resulting mixture is covered with leaves and left to ferment for one
week. Pulverized corm and leaf sheath pulp which were separately fermented for one week,
are mixed thoroughly with hands or feet and left wrapped in enset leaves to ferment for a
further one week. The mixture is left open for three days before it is buried in a pit lined with
enset leaves and laid with heavy stones. The mixture stays there until the time it is ready for
Both the bulla and kocho are buried together, bulla being wrapped separately and put in the
middle of the kocho. To get a good flavored kocho, the buried mix should stay for at least one
month, but when there is shortage of food it is taken out of the hole after 15 days. The bulla
should stay at least for 3 months, otherwise, it will have a sour taste. When the kocho is ready
to be eaten, it is taken out of the hole and squeezed using kacha (tiny fibers used to make rope
and other stuffs) and a long tapering wooden stand with pointed tip. After the unwanted liquid
is removed it is chopped until the fibers become very fine. Thereafter, it is baked and made
Enset processing occurs in different months of the year, twice on the average in the months of
December, February and around June. But the frequency differs from household to household.
38
Table 7 Total and average man-hours needed for ‘enset’ processing in WIBS and NWIBS sites
Preparation(selecting and 44 56 35 65
felling the enset , digging
hole, etc.)
Total 3 97 4 96
* Source: Field survey
Table 7 shows that in one processing cycle, over 96% of the work is done by women, and less
The households in the study areas participated in backyard gardening in their spare time. They
produced vegetable s and root crops, which were both for consumption and selling purposes.
Data collected for backyard products in Table 8 show the amount brought to the market after
deducting household consumption in both areas. And on average they produce 109.094 and
39
Table 8. Quantity of Backyard Produce for Sale
House hold WIBS House hold NWIBS
number Amount(kg) number Amount(kg)
1 372.4 1 10
2 55.4 2 15
3 330 3 216
4 100 4 20
5 200 5 20
6 0 6 144
7 200 7 15
8 50 8 10
9 69.4 9 10
10 93 10 15
11 80 11 0
12 148 12 0
13 40 13 0
14 0 14 20
15 0 15 10
16 43 16 20
17 96 17 288
18 150 18 144
19 70 19 0
20 20 20 144
21 90 21 72
22 0 22 100
23 15 23 50
24 100 24 12
25 70 25 15
26 100 26 144
27 230 27 216
28 150 28 0
29 155 29 0
30 200 30 50
31 192 31 72
32 150 32 72
33 120 33 72
34 20 34 144
35 100
36 0
37 100
38 120
39 72
Total 3709.2 2512
Average 109.094 64.41
Source: Field survey
40
5.1.5 Farm Activities
Farm activities include land preparation, fertilizer spreading, ploughing, sowing, weeding,
harvesting, threshing, transporting and storage. As shown in Table 9, about 81% and 78% of
these tasks were performed by men in WIBS and NWIBS areas, respectively, while about
19% and 22% were done by women. The women participated mostly during weeding and
sowing. They also participated during harvesting and threshing to a lesser extent. When
performing some of these activities, the work was done by debo. In this case, the role of the
women was mostly limited to preparing food for lunch for the group.
Table 9. Total and average man-hour spent in farm activities in WIBS and NWIBS Sites
Activities WIBS Site NWIBS Site
Male (%) Female Male Female
(%) (%) (%)
Land preparation 99.9 0.1 100 0
Fertilizer spreading 100 0 100 0
Ploughing 96.6 3.4 100 0
Sowing 68 32 58 42
Weeding 60 40 54 46
Harvesting 93 7 98 2
Threshing 92 8 97 3
Transporting 73 27 66 34
Storing 64 36 66 34
Total 81 19 78 22
* Source: Field Survey
41
Table 10 Mean difference of average man -hour spent on farm activities
WIBS NWIBS
t-value 0.80779
Data of appendix 4 were analyzed using the t-test to find out whether there is significant
difference in man-hour spent in WIBS and NWIBS (Table 10). The t value shows that there is
In both places female farmers participated actively in sowing, weeding, transporting and
storing of cereals and pulses. Whereas male farmers were very active in land preparation,
With respect to enset production, female farmers were active in spreading of manure. And
male farmers were active in the remaining activities. When the processing part is considered,
it is associated with women. All activities except cutting the enset were performed by women.
Decision making on when to harvest and how to use the products was made by the senior
woman of the household. Men usually decided when to clone, replant and where to plant the
enset. In crop production and marketing, men had control over majority of the sales, even
though women had also control over the sale of some crops.
42
5.2 Burdensome Tasks
Burdensome tasks are those which take much of the women’s time and, which are at the same
time tiresome. They are continuous, i.e., they take long time and appear frequently. When
performing these tasks, women get exhausted. Grinding by hand, carrying water from long
distances, traveling long distances to fetch fire-wood were the major burdensome tasks
identified.
Different tasks have been observed in the two study areas. Among these tasks grain grinding,
fetching water and kocho baking have shown differences in the man-hour requirements in the
two areas. The three tasks took most of women’s time in NWIBS sites as compared to their
requirement in WIBS areas. Observation and focus group interview among different groups
confirmed that the differences in the first two activities resulted from the interventions of the
technologies.
Information gathered from observation and interview showed that, water in the selected
households, is used for drinking, cooking, washing clothes, taking bath, watering gardens,
brewing arakie (local drink made of millet, barley or maize), tella (local drink made from
millet, or maize) and borde (local drink made from teff or sorghum). And the households in
WIBS site fetched water from nearby springs and water pumps whereas in NWIBS,
households fetched water from rivers and springs that were far away.
43
In comparing the difference in labor hour between the two selected areas, the man-hour has
been used as a common unit. The length of time taken was 9 months to avoid the effect that
the presence of rain can cause. The average man-hour is calculated per 9 months per
AMH=T*N*F*270
Where
After the average man-hour requirement was calculated for the two areas, t-test was used to
see if there was a significance difference. Using data of appendix 1, table 1 and table 2, the t-
value for fetching water for the two areas and the average man-hour requirement was
Table 11 Mean difference in water fetching between WIBS and NWIBS sites
WIBS NWIBS
t-value 5.16
The calculated t-value shows that man-hour requirement in the WIBS areas for fetching water
was significantly different from the NWIBS area at, 0.01 significance level. This means that
women in NWIBS sites spent more than double the time spent by those living in WIBS area.
44
5.3.2. Grinding Grain
The grains that were commonly ground were barely, maize, wheat, teff and beans. The
households ground the different grains for baking injera and bread, making wet, and brewing
arakie , borde and tella. In both of the study areas, it was learnt that, the people want their
For measuring different grains and pulses, tin cups were the most commonly used units.
Different cups were used for different grains. They generally vary in weight from 180 grams
for maize and lentil to 280 grams for wheat, teff, peas and beans.
Another measuring unit is the feresula, which is also common in the area. One Feresula is
equivalent to 17 kilograms.
After the introduction of grinding mill in some areas, differences have been observed with
respect to the man-hour requirement for grinding. The average man-hour per household per
year was calculated as a unit of comparison between the two areas. The average man-hour per
AMH=MH*N*12
Where
The average man-hour requirement and the t-value for fetching water for the two sites was
calculated from data of Appendix 1, Table 1and 2 and these are given in Table 12
45
Table 12 Mean difference of grain grinding between WIBS and NWIBS sites
WIBS NWIBS
Average man-hour per 57.44 599.4
household per year
t-value 6.3557
The resulting value of t=6.4 was compared with theoretical value with 71 degrees of freedom.
With respect to enset processing, the two sites practiced different methods. In the NWIBS
areas, the people used the traditional way of processing while in the WIBS sites they practiced
In the traditional way of processing, the task is performed in a sitting position with one leg
lifted up to firmly fix the leaf sheath on to the decorticating plank. Due to this, women
(especially pregnant women) felt very tired after work. Decorticating was done while sitting,
which brought the women to be in contact with the fluid and this in turn, made them
uncomfortable. In general, results from observation and focus group interview showed the
• The right leg is used to make firm the material meant for decortication and this
46
• Decorticating while sitting and squeezing using the feet creates uncomfortable
• The quality of the bulla is not good, i.e., it is mixed with pieces of fiber and dirt
• Women decorticate while standing, which makes the process to be done easily.
• The fluid does not touch the women, which creates good condition for work.
• The manual machine to squeeze the residual to get bulla is effective in labor
conversion.
Bamboo scraper is used in both ways of processing and it gets broken easily.
Result from focus group interview showed that there are also some problems associated with
It was also found that there was a difference in man-hour requirements in the two study areas.
This was analyzed using the average man-hour requirement for the task per household per
AMH=T*N*E
47
Where
From data of Tables 5 and 6 of Appendix 3, the following information was generated. As
shown in Table 13, the average man hour per household per year was 714 for WIBS and 1058
Table 13 Mean difference in enset processing between WIBS and NWIBS sites
WIBS NWIBS
t-value 0.02859
From the value of t, it could be inferred that there is no significant difference between the two
sites in the time used for enset processing at 0.05 level of significance.
Table 14 shows the man hour needed for enset processing, per enset per household. And it
was found that in WIBS area it was about 7.0 whereas in NWIBS it was 9.2. From this result,
it could be inferred that in WIBS area, one person can process from 1.5 up to 2 ensets per day,
whereas in NWIBS areas, the same person can process only 1 enset per day.
48
Table 14. Man-hour required for enset processing in WIBS and NWIBS areas
House-hold number of Man hour House-hold number of Man hour
number enset per year number enset per year
(WIBS) processed (NWIBS) processed
per year per year
1 18 126 1 24 420
2 24 256 2 24 240
3 6 48 3 28 240
4 27 72 4 16 176
5 12 84 5 24 132
6 30 144 6 9 96
7 24 225.6 7 6 120
8 16 216 8 8 160
9 12 54 9 30 252
10 21 90 10 32 384
11 12 72 11 16 144
12 20 96 12 27 192
13 20 120 13 18 108
14 21 120 14 18 88
15 18 126 15 30 270
16 9 72 16 24 168
17 24 128 17 30 220
18 25 96 18 24 126
19 18 60 19 18 180
20 30 163.8 20 30 198
21 36 144 21 22 192
22 30 120 22 27 180
23 36 144 23 24 192
24 16 127.2 24 20 180
25 40 576 25 30 540
26 12 84 26 21 240
27 18 288 27 24 180
28 24 216 28 27 198
29 18 144 29 16 192
30 12 90 30 18 180
31 18 144 31 24 216
32 24 126 32 14 96
33 30 192 33 12 120
34 24 288 34 24 144
35 15 216
36 24 288
37 10 90
38 16 96
39 15 96
Total 725 5052.6 819 7550
Average 6.97 9.22
Source: field survey
49
From the information gathered from formal survey, focus group interview and observation,
there is a strong justification that showed the extra time gained in WIBS area had been used
for producing vegetables and root crops in the backyards. The average production of roots and
vegetables for selling purpose per household per year was used to compare the difference
between mean productions in WIBS and NWIBS areas. Summarized information on backyard
Table 15 Average amount of backyard produce for sale in WIBS and NWIBS
WIBS NWIBS
Average Weight of roots and 109.09 64.41
vegetables (kg) for sale for a
household per year
t-value 2.3556
From the above value of t, it can be inferred that a significant difference existed in the
production levels of roots and vegetables in the two areas at 0.05 level of significance. In fact,
discussion made with women in WIBS area confirmed the above result. One woman in this
area said “previously, let alone producing this much in our backyards for sale, we did not
Production function is the mathematical relationship between the quantity of output and the
Xn), where Y is the output and the Xis are the inputs ( Heady and Dillon, 1998).
It is known that female farmers in WIBS area have access to labor and time saving
technologies. And it is also found that these technologies have helped them to get spare time
50
and energy as compared to the NWIBS areas. Fitting production functions in the two areas
could show the marginal productivities and which in turn show differences between them if
The Cobb-Douglas production function was estimated for WIBS and NWIBS, respectively as
follows.
Where,
The numbers in the brackets being the standard errors of the regression estimates.
51
The Production Function for the WIBS Area
From the estimated function for WIBS, it could be observed that male labor was the most
important factor as it affected gross output significantly (p<0.01). The other important factor
was farm land (size), which affected output positively and significantly (2 percent). The
remaining variables, female labor, livestock ownership, and number of enset plants processed
The estimated production function for NWIBS showed that the most important factor which
affected output level significantly (1 percent) was male labor. Female labor and farm land size
also affected output at 7 and 10 percent, respectively. The other factors specified in the model
The adjusted coefficient of multiple determination is a statistic which gives the proportion of
the variation in the output observations explained by the fitted function. Correction has been
made for the size of the sample studied. The values were 87.3 and 80.3 percent for WIBS and
NWIBS, respectively, with standard errors of 0.2681 and 0.2210. In both cases, the estimates
were more than three times of their standard errors. Therefore, the values were significant at
1% level. One can argue that the majority of the variability is captured by the regressed
function.
52
The F-test, which tests the overall significance of the regression estimates was also calculated
as 46.4 and 31.9 for WIBS and NWIBS areas, respectively. In both cases, the values were
For each input resource , the estimated coefficients (elasticities) indicate the expected
percentage increase or decrease in production that would occur if the amount of the input
resource was increased or decreased by 1 percent other input factors being held constant. And
because of the models' nature, the estimates of the elasticities remain unchanged over the
range of input levels to which the function is fitted and to which it might be applied.
On the other hand, the sum of the elasticities is an indication of the returns to scale under the
assumption that no relevant input factors have been excluded. The sums of the estimates were
1.052 and 0.907 for WIBS and NWIBS areas, respectively. These results imply the existence
of constant returns to scale in the operation of the farms. This shows that a proportional
change (increase or decrease) in the levels of all of the inputs together will bring a
Each of the elasticities for the two areas, except for enset and livestock, was less than one -
indicating that diminishing returns hold true for the particular resource. That is, a 1 percent
increase in input or use of the particular resource results in an increase in the level of
production by less than 1 percent. Whereas decreasing returns (an increase in input level
resulting in a decrease in the level of output) was shown in livestock estimates in both areas
53
Livestock ownership, which was expected to influence output pos itively, had negative and
insignificant impact. This, perhaps, has something to do with an increase in the sale of
fertilizers when there were large numbers of livestock, which were sold at the time of
repayment. Number of enset plants processed per year was also expected to influence output
negatively and significantly, but in WIBS it showed a positive effect. This could be due to the
fact that some households tend to save enset at the expense of grains.
The figures in the middle two columns of Table 12 are the elasticity coefficients which would
have been necessary, considering the mean quantity of resource and product in the area of
comparison, to give a marginal productivity equal to that computed in the area of contrast. For
54
example, the elasticity of 0.541for male labor in NWIBS (as compared to the NWIBS sample
coefficient of 0.46) would have been necessary to give a marginal product of 5.97 quintals,
which is the WIBS area average, in NWIBS (as compared to the sample prediction of 5.83
quintals for NWIBS). In comparing the 0.541 elasticity, as a constant, against the actual
elasticity of 0.46 in a null hypothesis sense, we obtain a value of t=-0.08; a value which is not
Considering the quantity of resources used, it is concluded that mean marginal productivities
in NWIBS were not significantly lower tha n in WIBS. So the assumption that the released
labor of female will be transferred to agricultural activities, which will be reflected through
increment in their marginal productivity did not meet its target here.
55
6 Summary, Conclusion and Recommendation
In the study areas, women participated in household activities, enset plantation, enset
processing and farm activities. Most of the tasks identified under each group took much of the
Technological interventions were made in one of the study areas to ease the burdens for
women. The interventions were made in grinding grain, fetching of water and processing of
enset Comparison between the areas with and without the interventions indicated that
women’s burden in the areas with the intervention has been significantly reduced with respect
to the man-hour requirements of the two tasks (grain grinding and fetching of water).
Agricultural activities in the area were performed by debo or dado . Here the women
participated mostly in sowing, weeding, carrying and storing. They rarely participated in the
preparation of the land, ploughing, fertilizer spreading and harvesting. In enset production
women were active in the spread of manure and almost all of the processing activity was done
by women. Also gender divisions in decision making depends on who is involved in what
task.
In both of the study areas, the agricultural productivity was almost the same. Thus, the extra
time that resulted from the introduction of labor and time-saving technologies in WIBS area
was not transferred to the production of cereals and pulses. But vegetables and root crops
production was observed to be more in WIBS area than NWIBS, which could be, as some
56
Besides the economic gain, it had also created leisure time for women, which, in turn, meant
more time for caring for their children and their own health.
Therefore, even though the burden of women was reduced through the introduction of
grinding mills, water pumps and enset processor, much of their labor was not transferred to
§ The labor pool system makes use of the debo and the dado practices in which the
people were provided with food and drinks. This implies that the women started
cooking the day before the farming task was performed until lunch time approached in
the morrow. Then, they took the food to the field and served to the group of people in
the debo . Finally, they returned the utensils to their home and came back to assist in
the field. So, the spare labor time could not be transferred to agricultural activities in
the exact sense of the word, i.e., unless their indirect participation in the farming
§ In both areas, when there was farming activity, other activities could not be done. For
instance, when there was a need to grind during that particular day, women stayed all
night before doing the task so that they could be free for the day.
§ The time of processing of enset was different from the time of farming activities, i.e.,
even if there was spare time during the processing, it was not used for farming
activities.
§ Due to the nearness of the garden relative to the far ming field, in which women
57
Two of the technologies introduced, i.e., grinding mill and water points, appeared to offer
very promising results in decreasing women’s work load. However, enset processing did not
yield a significant difference as expected. This may be because of unsuitable design of the
technology, the low purchasing power of the sample households, and the way in which the
58
6.2 Recommendation
• The organization should be in such a way that more people have access to it so that
• The price of the processor should be within the purchasing power of the farmers.
• The bamboo sticks used to scrap the material to be decorticated should be replaced by
The introduction of fuel-saving stoves would reduce the burden of women in fetching
firewood. Intervention should also be made with respect to firewood fetching, kocho baking
and wet making.
In farming activities, weeding takes much of both female and male labor hours. So, the
introduction of herbicides in the area would bring a significant reduction in the labor allocated
The production and sale of vegetables and root crops should also be encouraged, among other
things , through:
• construction of feeder roads connecting to the main road, which connects Addis Ababa
and Jimma. By doing this, the number of buyers would increase and this in turn, would
The Ministry of Agriculture should, through its development agents, create awareness about
59
There is a strong belief in the area, that people would die, or become poor if they produced
more than their neighbors. Such beliefs are counterproductive and should be abolished
60
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Appendices
65