Background
Women in rural communities remain the most vulnerable population in accessing agricultural productive resources with dire implications for food security, malnutrition, and household wealth. The study quantified the level of inequality and employed rigorous statistical models to understand the complex interrelationships of gender, women empowerment, geographic location, and their relative effect on women's access to agricultural productive resources in rural coastal and non-coastal communities in the Central region, a Coastal Savannah Agro-ecological zone of Ghana.
Methods
This was a community-based cross-sectional study using a multi-stage stratified cluster random sampling design to generate a representative sample of men and women who live in coastal and non-coastal communities in the Central region of Ghana. The Gini inequality index was used to determine the level of inequality in access to agricultural productive resources. The multivariable modified Poisson and Negative binomial regression models were used to quantify the linkages between geographic location, gender, and women empowerment in agricultural production decision-making and access to agricultural productive resources.
Results
The estimates from the Gini index showed that inequality in the access to agricultural productive resources was marginally higher among women than in men; higher in the coastal areas than in the non-coastal areas, and higher among women with low empowerment in agricultural production decision-making. Access to agricultural productive resources was higher by approximately 21% among women living in the non-coastal communities compared to those living in the coastal communities [adjusted prevalence ratio, aPR = 1.21, 95% CI: 1.04–1.42]; also, was higher by 46% among women who were adequately empowered to make decisions in agricultural productive services compared to women who were not adequately empowered ([aPR = 1.46, 95% CI: 1.18–1.82 ]). The prevalence of women being empowered in agricultural decision-making if the woman lives in a non-coastal area was higher by 10% compared to those who live in coastal areas [aPR = 1.10, 95% CI: 1.04–1.16]. Women's empowerment in agricultural decision-making was found to increase with age, as older women were more empowered to make decisions in agriculture. The prevalence of being empowered in agricultural decision-making was 33% higher among women aged 50 years and above compared to those aged 18–24 years [aPR = 1.33, 95% CI: 1.15–1.55].
Conclusion
Men and women have differential access to agricultural productive resources in the Central region of Ghana linked to empowerment, location, and age. To bridge the existing gap, interventions must prioritize addressing barriers that hinder access to agricultural productive resources, especially among younger women who live in coastal rural communities and who are not empowered to participate in decision-making. Policies geared towards improving women's access must consider the gender-specific constraints, legal framework, socio-cultural factors, employment, and decision-making power that remain the core drivers of inequality and hinder access to agricultural productive resources among women.