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New Insights from BFA Global Reveal What It Really Takes to Increase Women's Incomes
Selasa, 21 April 2026 | 21:19
NAIROBI, KENYA - African Media Agency - 21 April 2026 - BFA
Global today released new findings from its Women's Economic Empowerment
(WEE) Opportunity Leads Umbrella Program, identifying five critical,
interconnected domains that drive income growth for low-income women
micro-entrepreneurs. The insights emerge from a two-year collaboration
with 11 enterprises in Kenya through the WEE Program.The insights
challenge the notion that income growth follows a simple, linear path.
Instead, it shows that sustained income gains depend on a set of
reinforcing conditions working together.
"We started with a simple question: what does it really take to increase
incomes for low-income women in practice, not just in theory," said
co-authors Phoebe Kiboi and Maha Khan. "What we found is that no single
intervention works in isolation. Income growth happens when multiple
factors align."
Through the program's interventions, 1,800 women micro-entrepreneurs saw
their incomes rise by an average of 49 percent, equivalent to an
additional $85 per month.
The insights identify five interconnected domains that determine whether women can translate opportunity into sustained income:
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- Support Structures: Factors such as childcare, time,
mobility, and social norms shape whether women can participate in
economic opportunities at all. Enterprises that design around these
realities can unlock participation at scale.
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- Skills and Confidence: Skills training is most effective when
it builds both technical capability and self-belief, and when women
have real opportunities to apply what they learn.
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- Networks: Peer networks provide critical support systems,
enabling access to capital, customers, and information. These informal
structures often act as the backbone of women's economic activity.
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- Productive Capital and Assets: Access to capital drives
growth only when it is appropriately timed and tailored. Misaligned
financial products can hinder rather than help progress.
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- Market Linkages: Connecting women to markets creates opportunity, but sustained income depends on the strength of the other four domains.
When one domain is missing, progress stalls. Skills without market
access do not translate into income. Capital without capability creates
risk, and market access without support structures excludes those who
need it most.
The insights emphasize the need for more integrated approaches that
align multiple domains rather than optimizing individual interventions
in isolation.
For more information, see the key findings.
BERITA LAINNYA
BERIKAN KOMENTAR