The conclusion is self-evident: sending a family of five $50 per month over six months will not make any significant change in that family despite whatever model you may have there. So, it is refreshing that a World Bank report has confirmed what many of us felt was a waste of resources and time: “Despite the earnest efforts to uplift vulnerable populations, the study revealed that the cash transfer program fell short of significantly improving household consumption or boosting women’s employment opportunities.”
As I argued when we began this mindless policy, Nigeria can help those families if we focus on setting up clusters which will guarantee 24/7 electricity for cold rooms in each local government. In other words, if you use the money transferred to a few “lucky” citizens to build some cold rooms which can serve communities, you will reduce poverty by reducing post-harvest waste.
In the Igbo Nation, there is a season called “unwu” [famine], and it is the period between the planting of yams and before they get to maturity for harvest. Due to lack of storage means, historically, that period was considered a time of limited food options. Of course, that is not the case as we now have packaged food and other food options which were not available in ancestral Igbo.
My point is this: inadequate storage facilities is one of the reasons we have massive hunger in farming communities in Nigeria. If we focus on that root cause over the preferred handouts of commonwealth to a few, Nigeria will be on a path of fixing the real issue. Yet, this is not to say that governments cannot provide targeted support to families, but I do think that fund transfer should not be the main vector, if we desire to see meaningful impacts, on these initiatives.
The conclusion is self-evident: sending a family of five $50 per month over six months will not make any significant change in that family despite whatever model you may have there. So, it is refreshing that a World Bank report has confirmed what many of us felt was a waste of… pic.twitter.com/XO7RX5MaU5
— Ndubuisi Ekekwe (@ndekekwe) May 9, 2024
World Bank Research Reveals Limited Impact of Nigeria’s Cash Transfer Program






