Extending connectivity in rural areas and developing the digital skills of family farmers must be a regional priority, warned public and private sector authorities during the launch of a report on the state of digital technologies in rural areas of Latin America and the Caribbean. Barbados’ Prime Minister Mia Mottley, Honduras’ Secretary of Agriculture Laura Suazo, and the Director General of the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), Manuel Otero, were part of the launch of the report, which was prepared by IICA in collaboration with its private sector partners Bayer, Microsoft, and GSMA. The presentation highlighted the leading role that rural youth and women play in incorporating digital technologies into family farming.

The hybrid-format event coincided with the celebration of International Day for Rural Women. “Breaking down barriers, narrowing gaps. The key role of women and youth in digital technology adoption in rural areas of Latin America and the Caribbean” is the title of the study, which draws on statistical data from three previous studies conducted by IICA and its partners and presents the results of 31 in-depth interviews carried out in 14 countries across the region.

Speakers at the event included Alejandra Castro, Vice President of International Affairs and Sustainability Strategy at Bayer, and Lucas Gallitto, Director for Latin America at GSMA, an organization representing mobile network operators and advocating for public po.