Where a women’s tax is canceled, and businesswomen’s decisions valued

Women leaders’ problem-solving helps make their businesses more resilient

In a small study of entrepreneurs in especially climate-vulnerable parts of Kenya and Senegal, women managers were more likely to enact decisions to safeguard a business instead of addressing short-term needs. For example, they would grow an additional or a different crop, instead of shedding employees. 

According to the research, these strategies can reduce vulnerability to climate change and boost income stability.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, a close look at the unique impacts of daily life on women resulted in new policies in Malta, and a recommendation in Kenya and Senegal that women entrepreneurs deserve funding and support.

For governments and donors, investing in more women-led businesses could “offer strategic means to address climate justice concerns,” the authors wrote. 

Mariama Sonko and colleagues examine rice, March 7, in Niaguis, Senegal. They train fellow women farmers in agroecology.

Sylvain Cherkaoui/AP/File

Mariama Sonko and colleagues examine rice, March 7, 2024, in Niaguis, Senegal. They train fellow women farmers in agroecology.

Small- and medium-sized businesses provide 80% of all job opportunities in sub-Saharan Africa and generate as much as 40% of some countries’ gross domestic product. At 24%, African women have the highest rates of entrepreneurship in the world by some estimates.
Sources: The Conversation, MIT Sloan, International Finance Corporation

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