 This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. A new report says if women farmers had the same rights as men, more could be done to reduce world hunger. The report, Empowering Women in Agriculture, is from the anti-hunger group Bread for the World. Bread for the World says equal access to agricultural resources would help increase food security and economic growth. Faustine Wabwiri is the group's foreign assistance specialist. She says women constitute half of the agricultural labor force in not just Africa, but the developing countries as a whole. And when you think of Africa alone, she says, it's more than 60% of the total agricultural labor force being provided by women. The report says in most countries women working in rural areas are more likely than men to hold seasonal part-time and low-wage jobs. They also receive less pay for the same work. Ms. Wabwiri says women farmers often cannot get seeds, fertilizer, proper tools, credit, and especially land. She says in most of Africa about 80% of the population is living in rural areas and they subsist on agriculture. Women make up 60% of the agricultural labor force and yet they lack access to resources, she says. She says land is one good example. Less than 20% of all landholders are women. This is often because of legal as well as cultural reasons. She says women who have lost their husbands may have no legal rights over their land. The only way to keep the land, she says, is to marry, say, the brother of the dead husband. Restrictions like these, she says, continue to impede women's ability to fully enjoy their human rights. However, Ms. Wabwiri says women in agriculture are getting more attention these days. For example, Kenya's new constitution gives women the right to own land, but she says there is still a long way to go. Bread for the World is urging the United States government to increase development assistance or at least not to decrease it. She says feed the future, the U.S. government's agriculture aid program is helping to elevate the status of women. But Ms. Wabwiri says more African governments must recognize the major role that women play in agriculture and elsewhere. Just how much could hunger be reduced if women had equal access to agricultural resources? The report estimates that hunger could be reduced for an extra 100 to 150 million people. For VOA Special English, I'm Alex Villarreal.