Author
Listed:
- Sive Zintle Mbangiswano
(Entrepreneurship Development Unit, Faculty of Management Sciences, Central University of Technology, 20, President Brand Street, Bloemfontein 9301, South Africa)
- Elona Ndlovu
(BizPreneur, 1122 Burnett Street, Hatfield, Pretoria 0083, South Africa)
- Zamagebe Siphokazi Vuthela
(Business Management, Faculty of Management Sciences, Central University of Technology, 20, President Brand Street, Bloemfontein 9301, South Africa)
Abstract
In the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa, rural women agripreneurs encounter ongoing structural challenges in accessing formal finance, securing land rights, and gaining leadership roles, despite their vital contribution to agriculture and food security. This research combines a thematic review of secondary sources from 2018 to 2024 with an embedded case study based on primary qualitative data with women involved in the Citrus Growers Association–Grower Development Company (CGA–GDC) public–private partnership. This dual approach connects local, real-world entrepreneurial experiences with global financial inclusion initiatives, especially the G20 Women’s Empowerment Principles and the G20 Development Agenda. The findings highlight a consistent gap between policy and practice: while frameworks at both national and international levels advocate for women’s financial inclusion, actual implementation in rural agribusiness often neglects gender differences. Women’s engagement is limited by insecure land rights, restricted access to formal credit, male-controlled cooperative management, and insufficient gender-specific data monitoring. Drawing comparative insights from Kenya, India, and West Africa, the study proposes seven interconnected policy suggestions, such as establishing gender-disaggregated data systems, expanding women-led cooperatives, reforming land tenure laws, including entrepreneurial financial literacy in capacity-building programmes, and utilising gender-sensitive digital finance solutions. By connecting grassroots empirical evidence with global policy discussions, this study aims to contribute to academic debates and practical efforts to develop gender-responsive financial ecosystems, thereby boosting women’s economic independence, entrepreneurial activity, and rural progress in South Africa and similar contexts in the Global South.
Suggested Citation
Sive Zintle Mbangiswano & Elona Ndlovu & Zamagebe Siphokazi Vuthela, 2025.
"Empowering Rural Women Agripreneurs Through Financial Inclusion: Lessons from South Africa for the G20 Development Agenda,"
Administrative Sciences, MDPI, vol. 15(9), pages 1-18, August.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jadmsc:v:15:y:2025:i:9:p:340-:d:1737966
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