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Abstract
This article examines the importance of non-farm income in reducing per-capita income
inequality among agricultural households in southern Ethiopia, with an emphasis on the
gender dimension. Using a modified technique of inequality decomposition by income
sources applied to household survey data, it was found that female non-farm labor income
is the only income source that significantly reduces per-capita income inequality. More
precisely, a uniform increase in female non-farm labor income, among households that
already have income from this source, reduces inequality. Encouraging women to devote
more time to non-farm income-generating activities, and creating market mechanisms that
increase earnings in these activities, could potentially lift households out of poverty and at
the same time reduce income inequality as a whole. The impact on inequality could be
stronger if policies are directed at asset-poor households and less-educated households in
particular. One of the policies that could be useful in this regard is female educational
enhancements. This could open more opportunities for women in the hired labor market,
improve women's position within the household, and promote overall income inequality as
well as gender equality.