The Foundation for Agrarian Studies hosted a webinar in Bengaluru to mark the UN International Year of the Woman Farmer, sharing perspectives from village studies in India on women’s work.
On Thursday, March 26, 2026, the Foundation for Agrarian Studies (FAS), Bengaluru, organised a webinar titled “UN International Year of the Woman Farmer: Some Perspectives from Village Studies in India.”
The United Nations has declared 2026 as the International Year of the Woman Farmer to highlight the crucial yet often unrecognised role women play across agrifood systems, and to bring awareness to bridge the gender gap and boost women’s livelihoods globally. FAS has been running a social media campaign to underline women’s contributions in sustaining rural economies in India. The webinar marked a culmination of this campaign.
The session was chaired by Divya Pradeep, Associate Professor, Department of Economics, CHRIST (Deemed to be University). It began with a brief welcome address by Sandipan Baksi, Director, FAS, who talked about FAS’s consistent engagement with the question of women’s work in rural India.
First Step Towards Recognition
Madhura Swaminathan, Trustee, Foundation for Agrarian Studies and former Professor and Head, Economic Analysis Unit, Indian Statistical Institute, was the lead speaker.
She began the talk by stating: “Counting women farmers and workers is the essential first step towards recognising their work, and securing their rights and ensuring remuneration commensurate with their labour.”
Swaminathan spoke of how traditional labour force surveys are “unable to capture the work done by women in rural agrarian economies accurately because women’s tasks are frequently home based, farm based, seasonal, intermittent, and intermingled with unpaid care work and domestic responsibilities.” This invisibility, she argued, is compounded by the fact that many women do not report themselves as “workers,” as their responsibilities are often split between child care and other domestic chores, and agricultural tasks.
Even the current official statistics, which grossly underestimate women’s work, show that the female workforce in agriculture has risen to approximately 117.6 million, nearly reaching the male workforce of 127.5 million for the first time in post-Independence India. The rise in female participation also stems from economic distress: men are moving out of agriculture seeking more remunerative employment elsewhere, while women, physically constrained by the responsibilities of care work, are left with locally available, low-paid, or unpaid agricultural labour. The growing participation of women in MGNREGA is also a reflection of this lack of mobility.
Village Studies Reveal Women’s Heavy Contribution
The regular field surveys conducted by FAS clearly highlight the centrality of women’s labour to crop and livestock production in the countryside. These village studies indicate that women account for 25 to 60 per cent of the total labour deployed in cultivation across different regions. Despite this heavy reliance on women’s efforts, they do not necessarily receive “adequate days of employment” or a “reasonable return on their labour.”
Livestock Sector Almost Entirely Dependent on Women
The discussion dwelled on how livestock sector in rural India is almost completely dependent on women, who constitute the primary workforce but receive extremely low economic returns. In a cattle-owning household, for example, a woman typically spends about two hours a day per animal, adding up to roughly 91 8-hour working days a year. But the “implicit return on women’s labour in animal rearing is extremely low,” often falling below one-third of the daily wage rate for casual agricultural labour.
Madhura Swaminathan concluded it is a “matter of grave concern” “that women’s economic contribution is not adequately recognised,” and they remain a largely “underpaid, or, often unpaid part of the rural workforce.” The economic environment for rural women is defined by significant structural barriers and persistent wage gaps. Addressing these issues requires overcoming stumbling blocks in collection and analysis of data, which has to begin with systematically collecting gender disaggregated data on all dimensions of the rural economy.
Chair Underlines Relevance for India
In her summary, Divya Pradeep underlined the immense relevance of the UN’s declaration of 2026 as the “Year of the Woman Farmer,” for India, given the complex nature of the “feminisation” of agriculture in India, wherein women’s contributions to crop and livestock production are substantial but remain underreported. She discussed the methodological inadequacies in capturing women’s work. Participants spoke of how, even the Time-Use-Surveys conducted by the NSS failed to delineate the nature of activities women are engaged in for each household.
This was followed by a rich round of question and answers, which led to discussions that touched upon various facets of the structural hurdles faced by women in agriculture in India. The social impact of these hurdles is yet to be fully understood. Crucial data gaps were also identified, such as the lack of gender-disaggregated data on the cost of cultivation in official publications and missing information on women’s access to production-oriented credit like Kisan cards. Current Self-Help Group (SHG) loans are largely used for consumption. Finally, the session clarified the valuation of labour by distinguishing between monetised wages for hired workers and “implicit earnings” for family labour.
The webinar saw active participation from the attendees and was instrumental in throwing light on and advancing the important discussion on women’s work in agriculture.

