World Bank: Only 44% of Social Aid Reaches Nigeria’s Poor

November 12, 2025

3 minutes read

WORLD BANK

Despite billions of naira allocated annually to alleviate poverty, a recent World Bank report concludes that Nigeria’s social safety-net programs are failing to reach the citizens most in need.

The November 2025 assessment, titled “The State of Social Safety Nets in Nigeria,” reveals profound issues of efficiency and coverage.

The bank disclosed that a mere 44 percent of the total funds disbursed through government-supported safety-net schemes actually benefit impoverished Nigerians.

Inefficient Targeting and Diluted Benefits

The report studied Nigeria’s spending, assessed coverage, and evaluated the efficiency of its social safety nets. It found that fragmented implementation, poor targeting, and weak funding leave millions of vulnerable citizens without meaningful relief, undermining the government’s lofty poverty-reduction goals.

Though 56 percent of the programs’ recipients are officially classified as poor, they receive only 44 percent of the total financial benefits.

The bank explained this large imbalance is structural. Most programs, including the major National Social Safety Nets Programme (NASSP), allocate a fixed sum per household, not per individual.

Consequently, large poor families often stretch the limited benefit across many members. For instance, a family of eight in a rural village may receive the identical cash transfer as a family of three in a city, despite facing far deeper hardship.

The same limited transfer amount is shared among a much larger number of people living in poorer households, diluting the intended impact.

Programs that target individuals rather than households are less affected. However, the National Home-Grown School Feeding Programme (NHGSFP), which feeds primary school pupils, reaches only children in grades one to three and does not yet have full national coverage. This limited scope further restricts the number of children who can benefit.

Minimal Impact on National Poverty

Nigeria’s investment in social protection is shockingly low. The country spends barely 0.14 percent of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) on social protection. This figure falls far short of the global average of 1.5 percent and the Sub-Saharan African average of 1.1 percent.

The bank cautioned that this minuscule allocation has had “almost no impact” on reducing poverty. The combined effect of all existing social protection initiatives has reduced the national poverty headcount by a minimal 0.4 percentage points.

Simply put, the needle on poverty has barely moved despite multiple government intervention claims. The weak result is blamed on inadequate benefit size and poor program design.

The report did acknowledge that the NASSP cash transfer program, which uses the National Social Registry (NSR) to identify poor households, shows superior results among its direct beneficiaries.

Within this group, the program reduced poverty by 4.3 percentage points, nearly ten times more effective than all other initiatives combined. With over 85 million individuals currently listed, the NSR is the largest database in Sub-Saharan Africa. The bank views it as “a ready-made platform” for more accurate and transparent social assistance delivery.

Dependence on Foreign Aid

The World Bank also voiced concern over Nigeria’s high dependence on external donors for welfare funding. Between 2015 and 2021, official development assistance accounted for approximately 60 percent of federal spending on these safety-net programs. The World Bank itself provided over 90 percent of that donor support.

The report warned that this reliance exposes Nigeria to significant funding gaps if donor support declines. The bank stressed: “There is an urgent need for Nigeria to find fiscal space for sustainable social safety-net programming.”

 


Regulatory Body Bans Small-Sachet Alcohol by December 2025

Share:
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Related Links

Tiger Woods Steps Back from 2027 Ryder Cup Captaincy, Granted Overseas Treatment Approval

Tiger Woods has withdrawn from consideration as captain of the United States team for the ...

Zimbabweans Raise Alarm Over Constitutional Amendment Amid Fears of Shrinking Political Choice

Tensions are rising across Zimbabwe as citizens voice strong opposition to a proposed constitutional amendment ...

CDD Unveils 5-Year Plan to Combat Democratic Decline, Insecurity in West Africa

The Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD-West Africa) has launched an ambitious five-year strategic plan ...

Global Fuel Prices Surge Despite Oil Market Stability Amid Gulf Tensions

Global oil prices may have stabilised in recent days, but motorists around the world are ...

Features

Zimbabweans Raise Alarm Over Constitutional Amendment Amid Fears of Shrinking Political Choice

Tensions are rising across Zimbabwe as citizens voice strong opposition to a proposed constitutional amendment ...

African Union, West Africa Welcome UN Resolution Declaring Slave Trade Crime Against Humanity

The African Union has welcomed a landmark resolution by the United Nations General Assembly formally ...

Nigeria, Others Move to Launch ECOVISA to Ease Travel Across West Africa

Nigeria has joined Ghana, Senegal, Gambia, Sierra Leone, Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia, Togo and other West ...

Namibia Rejects Starlink Licence, Deepening Southern Africa Setback

Starlink, the satellite internet venture backed by Elon Musk, has suffered another setback in southern ...

ECOWAS, African Union Deepen Partnership on Infrastructure, Regional Integration

The President of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Commission, Omar Alieu Touray, ...

Fayemi Pushes for Fairer Africa-West Deals, Urges Industrialisation and Tech Transfer

Former Ekiti State governor, Kayode Fayemi, has called for a major reset in Africa’s economic ...

ECOWAS Moves to Establish Regional Open Data Framework to Strengthen Digital Governance

The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has taken a major step toward improving ...

Youth in Oil-Rich Congo Struggle With Poverty, Seek Economic Change

  Despite being one of Africa’s major oil producers, the Republic of the Congo continues ...

Latest News

Today in History

A honeybee can fly at fifteen miles per hour.

Exchange Rate Per Dollar

AM Armenian Dram376.3046
GH Ghana Cedi10.9928
GM Gambian Dalasi74.0541
GN Guinea Franc8,773.59
NG Nigerian Naira₦1,378.74
CF CFA Franc BEAC568.6474
03 Apr · CurrencyRate · USD
CurrencyRate.Today
Check: 03 Apr 2026 04:45 UTC
Latest change: 03 Apr 2026 04:39 UTC
API: CurrencyRate
Disclaimers. This plugin or website cannot guarantee the accuracy of the exchange rates displayed. You should confirm current rates before making any transactions that could be affected by changes in the exchange rates.
You can install this WP plugin on your website from the WordPress official website: Exchange Rates🚀

YOUR THOUGHTS

Let us know what you think

Contact the People’s Paper with feedback on stories and how we could make wapress.africa even better!

newsletter image

Stay up to date with the latest from West Africa Press

Editorial feedback and complaints

Contact the public editor with feedback for our journalists, complaints, queries or suggestions about articles on WApress.

Subscribe Newsletter!

Be the first to receive our latest contents and more...

Need help?