Type | Report |
Title | Social protection in Nigeria |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2012 |
URL | http://www.unicef.org/nigeria/Social_protection_in_Nigeria_Synthesis_report.pdf |
Abstract | Despite strong economic growth, 54% of the Nigerian population remains living in poverty. In recent years, the government and its development partners have sought to develop social protection instruments as a mechanism to tackle such high rates of poverty and vulnerability in the country and to support progress in both the economic and the social spheres. As such, social protection is now emerging as a policy objective. This synthesis report is part of the project, ‘Social Protection Diagnostic and Forward Agenda for UNICEF’, aims to support the government of Nigeria in realising its overarching development strategy (Vision 20: 2020) and developing a national social protection strategy. The project has five thematic reports: a mapping of social protection and its effectiveness, the role of cash transfers in Nigeria, the links between social protection and HIV and AIDS and social protection and child protection and fiscal space. The study drew on both primary and secondary research carried out between January and June 2011. A comprehensive review of literature was carried out on social protection, HIV and AIDS and child protection in Nigeria, including an analysis of policy and strategy documents, programme documents, impact evaluations and other grey literature. Key informant interviews (KIIs) were undertaken with stakeholders at the national and state levels (including relevant government, donor, international and national non-governmental organisation (NGOs), civil society and academic actors). Case studies were carried out in four states – Adamawa, Benue, Edo and Lagos – selected on the basis of previous and current implementation of the cash transfer In Care of the Poor (COPE) programme and existence of HIV and AIDS and child protection programmes; prevalence of HIV and AIDS and specific child protection vulnerabilities; state poverty profiles and susceptibility to shocks and stresses; and a geographical spread across the northern and southern regions. Social protection policy has been under discussion since 2004 at both national and regional level, but despite a chapter committed to social protection in the implementation plan of the national development plan, Vision 20: 2020, this has not resulted in significant levels of programme implementation. The main projects currently underway are three small-scale federal government-led programmes: the COPE conditional cash transfer (CCT) programme, subsidised maternal and child health care (MCH) provision and the Community-based Health Insurance Scheme (CBHIS). Other social assistance programmes are implemented in an ad hoc manner, run by government ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) at state level. These include child savings accounts, disability grants, health waivers, education support (e.g. free uniforms) and nutrition support. Other programmes led by donors include CCTs for girls’ education in three states and programmes that include social protection subcomponents (not as the primary objective): HIV and AIDS and orphan and vulnerable children (OVC) programmes, providing nutrition, health and education support. Labour market programmes include federal- and state-level agricultural subsidies/inputs, youth skills and employment programmes – but these are not necessarily targeted at the poor and are often implemented at the discretion of the state rather than as part of a coordinated response to unemployment and underemployment and constraints to agricultural productivity. We draw on Devereux and Sabates-Wheeler’s (2004) transformative social protection framework, which takes into consideration both economic and social sources of risk and is based on a framework whereby social protection promotes social equity as well as economic growth. Social equity laws and legislation can be seen as part of the transformative social protection agenda. Nigeria has passed the Civil and Political Rights Covenant, the Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Covenant, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and the Convention on the Rights of the Child. However, only the latter has been domesticated into national law – and this not by all states. Meanwhile, implementation of these laws is weak at best. There has been limited, if any, conceptual link made by the government between the broader regulatory policies of equality and rights and their importance to social protection policies. |
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