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Articles

Effects of Out-migration on Rice-farming Households and Women Left Behind in Vietnam

(Gender Specialist/Socioeconomist) , (Social Scientist) , (Associate Professor) & (Associate Scientist)
Pages 169-198 | Published online: 25 Oct 2017
 

Abstract

Vietnam is one of the major rice-producing countries in Asia, and since 1989 it has been a rice-exporting country. However, poor rice-farming households that depend primarily upon their own labor for farming face significant constraints on production that push members to migrate. Out-migration could have effects on agricultural production and household welfare. This study was conducted to draw correlations across migration, livelihoods, farming outcomes, and gender roles to derive gender-responsive policy recommendations for action in rice-producing villages of the Mekong Delta in the south and Red River Delta in the north. Results revealed that labor out-migration was highest in the rainfed villages in the south where the poor are located. Remittances comprised signifi cant proportions of total household income, often more important than rice income, as was the case in the north. The effects of out-migration on family members left behind, particularly women, depend on the characteristics of the migrant, the duration of absence of the migrant, use of remittances, and women’s access to productive resources. The findings of this study have far-reaching implications for gender-responsive research and extension programs dealing with ricebased farming systems in Vietnam and other Asian countries that facelabor shortages due to out-migration from rural areas.

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