CARE Launches Agricultural Program to Improve Food Security, Empower Women Farmers in South Asia and Africa




Click photo to view an enlarged version (©2007 Brendan Bannon/CARE)
Vizyenia Boaz is the owner of a store she opened in April 2007 in Chipanga Village, Malawi. She was able to open her shop only six years after she joined CARE's second village saving and loan group in 2001. (©2007 Brendan Bannon/CARE)

ATLANTA (February 23, 2012) - CARE, the global fighting poverty organization, announced today the start of its new Pathways program. Pathways will enable 150,000 women smallholder farmers and their families over five years in Bangladesh, Ghana, India, Malawi, Mali and Tanzania improve food security and long-term resiliency by implementing and scaling a model which will improve their access to land, water, markets, agricultural training and services. The Pathways model is centered on the proven success of CARE's Village Savings and Loans Associations, and will work with community-based savings and producer organizations to build their capacities and skills to "ready" them for additional sustainable agricultural activities, practices and markets. CARE's Pathways initiative is supported by a $15 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which joins additional funders such as AusAID and the Aga Khan Foundation.

"If you care about the poorest, you care about agriculture," said Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. "Investments in agriculture are the best weapons against hunger and poverty, and they have made life better for billions of people. The international agriculture community needs to be more innovative, coordinated and focused to really be effective in helping poor farmers grow more. If we can do that, we can dramatically reduce suffering and build self-sufficiency."

Poor women farmers in developing countries face widespread discrimination and are often excluded from accessing and using the critical resources which result in adequate food production. Evidence shows that across the developing world women are far more likely than men to have less access to scarce and valuable resources such as land, water, training and markets. Despite being equally active and efficient farmers as men, women access just 10 percent of agricultural credit and less than 10 percent of agricultural extension services in sub-Saharan Africa. This gap results in persistently low yields, food insecure households and childhood malnourishment – 1 in 3 children is malnourished and more than 1 billion people are hungry.

"The plight of women farmers in developing countries is palpable and vital to the families they support," said Dr. Helene Gayle, president and CEO of CARE. "We are thrilled to join The Gates Foundation to help women all over the world increase their income and build better lives and brighter futures for their families and their communities."

Applying CARE's integrated approach to food security, market engagement and women's empowerment, Pathways will reach women who farm fewer than five acres of land and who are not typically served by other development programs. Most of these women live on an income of less than $2 per day and suffer food shortages for at least part of the year. They seldom own the land they cultivate and have little or no control or influence over income and farming decisions in their communities.

Pathways will go well beyond urgent, yet short-term solutions for women smallholder farmers. The model ensures that elements such as strengthening sustainable community-based organizations, empowering women to build agricultural-based businesses, providing essential skills like financial literacy and improved and sustainable agricultural practices, and building self-sustaining relationships between women, their households members, service providers and markets, will ensure the program benefits these women and their communities beyond the five-year life of the program. Pathways will also evaluate the model's effectiveness and share lessons broadly in the hope that others will learn from and take up the model's approaches.

Find out more: Bill Gates Calls International Response to Helping Poor Farmers Outdated and Inefficient, Outlines Changes Needed to Feed 1 Billion Hungry


CARE's Experience:

Founded in 1945 with the creation of the CARE Package, CARE is a leading humanitarian and development organization fighting global poverty. CARE places special focus on working alongside poor girls and women because, equipped with the proper resources, they have the power to lift whole families and entire communities out of poverty. Our six decades of experience show that when you empower a girl or woman, she becomes a catalyst, creating ripples of positive change that lift up everyone around her. That's why girls and women are at the heart of CARE's community-based efforts to improve education, health and economic opportunity for everyone. We also work with girls and women to promote social justice, respond to emergencies and confront hunger and climate change. Last year CARE worked in 84 countries and reached 122 million people around the world. To learn more, visit www.care.org.




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