52
Uzbekistan Country Gender Assessment Update
Women, including those engaged in formal or informal employment, contribute to their family’s
economy through the performance of their traditional family, and household obligations, such
as providing and maintaining the necessary levels of water, heat, food, and hygiene of other
family members. the economic benefit derived from this contribution has not been calculated,
and is not included in Gdp calculations.
Women also contribute to the family budget by tending small gardens and larger plots of
land; growing fruits, vegetables, or seedlings; caring for livestock and poultry; producing dairy
products for family consumption and for sale in the community; baking bread; sewing for
the family and sometimes taking sewing orders from neighbors, etc.).
157
In Organisation for
economic Co-operation and development (OeCd) and non-OeCd countries, women spend
as much time on nonmarket or unpaid activities as men spend on paid work.
158
In many cases, labor out-migration allows people to earn a higher income than they could
by working on a private garden plot or growing livestock. Women are very unlikely to leave
their family for labor migration because the traditional way of life and women’s reproductive
functions require their constant presence in the house.
In most cases, rural men retain access to and control over external and internal resources, but
also depend on the market value of those resources are controlled by men.
159
Rural women can
usually control small amounts of the money they earn by selling milk and dairy products, eggs,
and other agricultural products, but this amount has little relation to the time or labor necessary
to produce the resource. Compared with men, women very often spend much more time and
effort producing these items. For example, in the Kitab district, where part of the family income
is derived from the sale of seedlings and fruits, women do most of the work involved in tending
the garden and harvesting the crops.
160
Cattle are a special type of property in rural areas, and livestock represents a key capital
investment for most families. Resources generated by cattle cover everyday expenses and the
cost of larger family events (e.g., weddings, traditional ceremonies and rituals, the construction
of a new house for a married son, higher education for children). to cover larger family costs,
livestock should be able to reproduce in sufficient quantities (at least 10–15 head of small
ruminants and 2–3 large cattle). Family livestock are inherited from father to son. the right
to dispose of cattle belongs to men, usually the eldest son in the household. When sons and
daughters all marry, a father gives his eldest son some cattle to form his primary capital.
161
Farmers and small businesses have limited entrepreneurial knowledge and skills, and they lack
access to information about market opportunities, appropriate technologies, and financial
157
adB. 2016.
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