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Bargaining Power and Biofortification: The Role of Gender in Adoption of Orange-Fleshed Sweet Potato in Uganda Julia Behrman, Daniel O. Gilligan, Neha Kumar, Scott McNiven, J.V. Meenakshi, Agnes Quisumbing GAAP Outreach Workshop Washington, DC, May 8, 2014

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Page 1: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

Bargaining Power and Biofortification: The Role of Gender in Adoption of Orange-

Fleshed Sweet Potato in Uganda

Julia Behrman, Daniel O. Gilligan, Neha Kumar, Scott McNiven, J.V. Meenakshi, Agnes Quisumbing

GAAP Outreach Workshop

Washington, DC, May 8, 2014

Page 2: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

GAAP Partner Organizations

Page 3: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

Gender and Biofortification

HarvestPlus is promoting biofortification as a strategy to reduce malnutrition (e.g., vitamin A deficiency (VAD); iron deficiency)

– strategy: breed staples crops to be a rich source of missing micronutrients like iron, vitamin A, and zinc

– potential: sustainable in rural areas, self-targeting toward the poor, cost-effective over time

Success of biofortification depends on widespread adoption and consumption of new crop varieties. Gender may be important:

– women provide much of the on-farm labor in Africa and elsewhere and are primarily responsible for child diets

– there is often a complex dynamic of intrahousehold gender relations for crop choice (von Braun, Puetz and Webb, 1989)

Page 4: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

• HarvestPlus Orange-Fleshed Sweet Potato (OSP) Project

• disseminate provitamin-A-rich OSP as a strategy to increase vitamin A intakes and reduce vitamin A deficiency

• In 2007, 10,000 households in Uganda were given OSP vines plus agriculture, nutrition and marketing trainings in two models: • Model 1: 2 years of trainings (intensive)• Model 2: 1 year of trainings (less intensive)

An Evaluation of Biofortification in Uganda

• The IFPRI/HarvestPlus/CIP evaluation

• randomized, controlled trial • 2007-2009: baseline & endline

surveys• n=1,472 households• outcomes: OSP adoption,

dietary intakes of vitamin A, serum retinol • 2011: qual study; follow-up

survey

Page 5: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

Key Findings of OSP Evaluation

1. OSP adoption: Project increased OSP adoption by 61 percentage points (ppt). Share of OSP in total SP area increased to 43%.

2. Dietary Intakes of vitamin A (from dietary recall modules)• dietary intakes of vitamin A increased sharply for two

cohorts of children (3-5 yrs, 6-35 mos) and for adult women

• prevalence of inadequate intakes of vitamin A fell 33 ppt for young children and 26-36 ppt for women

3. Serum retinol• significant 9.5 percentage point reduction in prevalence

of low serum retinol (retinol<1.05μmol/L) at endline among children with low serum retinol at baseline

Page 6: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

1. How do gender dimensions of control over land and intrahousehold decisionmaking affect OSP adoption and vitamin A intakes?

2. What is the role of gender in the effect of social networks on OSP diffusion and sustainability of OSP adoption?

Topics of GAAP Research on Gender and Biofortification

Page 7: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

1. Control over assets and OSP adoption• The share of assets exclusively owned by women or by

men does not affect the household decision to grow OSP in a given season

• In female-headed households, the share of exclusively owned...• ...land assets: weakly increases OSP adoption• ...nonland assets: decreases OSP adoption

Lessons about gender and OSP adoption

Table 2: HH OSP adoption, controlling for women’s baseline asset ownership

Dep. Var.: Pr(Adopt OFSP)All project households

Female headed households

Male headed households

Share of land exclusively 0.038 0.365* -0.011 owned by women, 2007 (0.070) (0.217) (0.076)

Share of nonland assets exclusively -0.029 -0.540** 0.032 owned by women, 2007 (0.069) (0.232) (0.074)Observations 1305 138 1167Notes: RE model with controls. * significant at the 10% level; **significant at the 5% level.

Page 8: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

2. Gender, control over land and crop choice

Household crop choice decisions are complex and are usually joint decisions by men and women, but with men taking the lead. OSP adoption is most likely on plots where decisions are joint, but women play a leading role.

• Plots exclusively controlled by women are not more likely to have OSP

• Conditional on household adoption, male controlled plots are least likely to have OSP

Lessons about gender and OSP adoption

Page 9: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

Table 6: OSP adoption by female ownership of nonland assets• Where female share of assets is higher, decision-making on joint plots appears more egalitarian, but OSP adoption is lower on male-controlled plots

Dep Var: Grow OSP on this

Low share of female ownership of nonland assets

High share of female ownership of nonland assets

parcel (1) (2)Parcel control: female only 0.032 -0.036

(0.049) (0.035)Parcel control: male only -0.085 -0.198

(0.065) (0.082)**Parcel control: joint, female 1st 0.097 0.021

(0.029)*** (0.032)Observations 2377 2655 Notes: Other control variables not reported.

3. Women’s assets, control over land and OSP adoption

• Households in which women have lower asset ownership are more likely to grow OSP on joint plots with women in primary control

Lessons about gender and OSP adoption

Page 10: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

4. Role of gender in diffusion of OSP to other households• Women do not play a unique role in OSP diffusion, but

their participation in nutrition trainings (women only) increased diffusion

Lessons about gender and OSP adoption

Dep Var: Shared OSP vines with other households All Kamuli Bukedea Mukono

Panel A Household has a female FG member 0.012 0.145** -0.082 0.067 (0.052) (0.066) (0.099) (0.146) Panel B Household has a female FG member 0.010 0.092 -0.092 0.062 (0.051) (0.059) (0.091) (0.096) Attended at least one nutrition training 0.228*** 0.347* 0.165 0.302** (0.072) (0.180) (0.109) (0.112) Notes: Models control for land area under the household’s control in 2007 and an indicator for Model 2. Models of the full sample include district dummy variables. * significant at the 10% level, ** significant at the 5% level, *** significant at the 1% level.

Table 8: Gender-based differences in diffusion of OSP, 2007-2009

Page 11: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

5. Gender, asset control and intakes of vitamin A• Share of nonland assets exclusively controlled by

women is associated with higher increase in vitamin A intakes

• But treatment effects are not larger for women with more asset control

Lessons about gender and OSP adoption

Table 9: Gender differences in control over assets vitamin A intakes

Dep Var: Change in dietary intake of vitamin A, 2007-2009

Change in dietary intake of vitamin A, 2007-2009 (μg RAE)

Panel A Average impact of OSP project 445.5*** (146.0) Share of nonland assets exclusively controlled by women 509.3** (237.8) Panel B Average impact of OSP project 269.0* (140.1) Interaction of treatment effect with share of nonland assets 356.2 exclusively controlled by women great than 5 percent (279.1) Notes: Sample includes children age 3-5 years in each round. * significant at the 10% level, ** significant at the 5% level, *** significant at the 1% level.

Page 12: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

What have we learned about the role of gender in social networks and sustainability of OSP adoption

This research is ongoing• We have found large impacts of social and information

networks on diffusion of OSP to neighboring households

• Preliminary work on the role of gender in this diffusion does not show large effects, but this is ongoing

Page 13: Harvest Plus GAAP presentation

Implications for Programming

• In the Uganda study• Women do play an important role in decisions about

adopting OSP and about vitamin A consumption by children, but intrahousehold dynamics on the adoption decisions are complex

• suggests continuing to target women for nutrition trainings, but there may be some benefits to bringing men in as well

• In new diffusion experiments being conducted with HarvestPlus, we are giving a unique role to opinion leaders in health, who are almost always women. This may shed new light on the role of female leaders in promoting adoption

• In other biofortification studies, context really matters