Connecting women with financial resources can help them meet their basic needs and start or grow businesses. However, it is estimated that micro, small, and medium-sized businesses owned by women globally are underfunded by USD 1.7 trillion. Closing the credit gap for women owned small and medium enterprises would result in a 12 per cent increase in annual incomes on average by 2030.
In addition to financial resources, women need access to land, information, technology, and natural resources. In 2022, 2.7 billion people still lacked internet access, which is fundamental for getting a job or starting a business.
Women are also less likely than men to own or have secure rights for agricultural land in 87 per cent of countries where data is available, despite the fact that more than one-third of working women are employed in agricultural industries.
When women do have equal rights to access, own, and use resources, they can invest in themselves by improving their well-being, education, starting a business or exercising agency over their income to build a society that works for them. For example, in many contexts women’s economic empowerment reduces gender-based violence, increases political and social participation and leadership, and facilitates disaster risk reduction.1