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Published on 3 March 2025

When you hear the word entrepreneur, what comes to mind? Perhaps you picture sleek tech start-ups or bustling office spaces. But for millions of women around the world, entrepreneurship looks very different. 

As we mark International Women’s Day 2025, we reflect on how empowering women to lead in business can transform lives—not just for the themselves, but for their families and entire communities too.  

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Accelerate action for gender equality

At the current pace, it could take over 130 years to achieve full gender parity. But with urgent action, this timeline can be changed. 

Across the globe, women are stepping into roles once considered off-limits. They're leading farms, building cooperatives and creating businesses in spaces where their presence wasn’t always welcomed.  

Women like Janet, Hira and Esther are proving that when women are given the right tools and opportunities, they’re not just working for change—they’re accelerating it. 

Janet Ben

In Malawi, Janet Ben is part of the Makande Women’s Group, where women are leading a sustainable business that produces baobab juice. With training and new tools like solar-powered dryers and juice-making machines, Janet and her group have been able to grow their business and increase their income.

As the group expands its production, they’re not only earning more but overcoming systemic barriers to equality and independence. Janet’s journey shows how women in rural communities can become leaders and changemakers, inspiring others to follow in their footsteps. 

Image credits and information i
Janet Ben, 31, showing off all the bottles of baobab (malambe) juice that she and her fellow Makande Women's Group members have made at their processing unit in Ngabu Traditional Authority, Chikwawa District, Southern Malawi, in March 2021. Credit: Malumbo Simwaka
Janet Ben, 31, showing off all the bottles of baobab (malambe) juice that she and her fellow Makande Women's Group members have made at their processing unit in Ngabu Traditional Authority, Chikwawa District, Southern Malawi, in March 2021.
Hira Moni Khatun holding up cloth she uses in her business in Kurigram Bangladesh. Young woman dressed in yellow, holding yellow and green cloth.

Hira Moni Khatun 

In Bangladesh’s remote Kurigram region, Hira Moni Khatun is breaking through societal constraints to rewrite her story. Early marriage and limited access to education mean many women in her village never get the chance to earn an income. But with support from Christian Aid, Hira and her group have learned to produce and sell cloth, now using smartphones and Wi-Fi hubs to expand their business. 

Training in e-commerce has opened new horizons, allowing Hira and her team to reach customers far beyond their village. As their business grows, so does their confidence, inspiring other women in the community to dream bigger.

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Esther Simwaka

Esther Simwaka is one of the women leading the Ighembe Cooperative in Malawi, where they mill and package rice to improve their livelihoods. With new business skills and sustainable farming techniques, Esther and her peers have been able to run a successful cooperative with better access to finance.

The cooperative has brought financial stability to Esther and other members, allowing them to earn fairer prices for their rice and invest in their families’ futures. With newfound confidence and skills, Esther now works toward her long-term goals and inspires others in her community to do the same.

As Esther says ‘The cooperative has given me a better direction in life. I work hard every day because I have set goals, I want to achieve to make my family happy.’ 

Image credits and information i
The Ighembe Group in Karonga District, through the Breaking the Barriers programme, has started milling Kilombero rice. Comprising various local women’s groups, they’ve established a new rice mill business and formed a cooperative of around 86 members wit Credit: Malata Mathews/Christian Aid
Esther is a member of Ighembe Cooperative and Tibonge Gwereweta Group. Ester is weighing the newly milled rice at their mill.

Why this matters

These aren’t just individual triumphs—they’re stories of resilience made possible through the work of Christian Aid’s partners, whose support is creating new opportunities and reshaping futures across communities. 

Women’s economic empowerment is a cornerstone of gender justice. Yet, across the world, systemic barriers continue to limit access to resources, education and financial independence. 

And at Christian Aid, we believe that poverty cannot be eradicated until these barriers are dismantled. Inequality keeps women trapped in cycles of disadvantage, with limited access to resources, education and economic opportunities.  

When women are empowered to lead, they transform their lives while challenging the systems that perpetuate injustice. 

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