Recently, a viral message on WhatsApp asked the public to register for a proposed #8,000 cash transfer to about 12 million poor households to cushion the effect of the fuel subsidy removal. Quite a few unsuspecting Nigerians without media literacy would have fallen for the message. Again, a good number of Nigerians have
Recently, a viral message on WhatsApp asked the public to register for a proposed #8,000 cash transfer to about 12 million poor households to cushion the effect of the fuel subsidy removal. Quite a few unsuspecting Nigerians without media literacy would have fallen for the message.
Again, a good number of Nigerians have questioned the credibility and reliability of the methodologies adopted in building the much-touted National Social Register, yet, some have spoken in favour of its merit. For media literacy around the issue, it is imperative to make do with the available pieces of public information available in the making of the current National Social Register.
Social Safety projects have existed in Nigeria for decades including the National Directorate of Employment (NDE) established in 1987 under the Ibrahim Babangida regime, the National Poverty Eradication Programme (NAPEP) under the Olusegun Obasanjo presidency, and the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) initiated by the government of President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. These programmes were expected to improve the living standard of the most vulnerable population among Nigerians.
The National Social Safety Nets Coordinating Office (NASSCO) was established in 2016 by the Federal Government under president Buhari, alongside the World Bank, to strengthen the social safety nets and social protection system in Nigeria to help end extreme poverty and promote shared prosperity. It is also to facilitate and support State Operations Coordinating Units (SOCUs) to conduct the identification and registration of Poor and Vulnerable Households (PVHHs)
Currently, data from the National Social Safety Net Coordinating Office (NASSCO) shows that there are 15,374,523 poor and vulnerable households, translating to 61,594,500 individuals, including 135,613 communities, 8,000 wards and 742 LGs in its database.
In its latest report (June 2023), The World Bank had advised the Nigerian Government, following the gains and pains trailing the removal of oil subsidy, to expand its social protection program to include more vulnerable. According to the Bretton Woods institution, The Government can leverage the public trust and support garnered through the early rollout of cash transfers and build on the registries or the payment systems to provide targeted support to many more households not covered by the program.
President Bola Tinubu had earlier proposed to use the social register as a framework for its sustainable cash transfer program before he directed an immediate review of the project.
What is the National Social Register (NSR)?
- The National Social Register is a repository of information about potential beneficiaries for multiple social assistance programs. One key feature is that the beneficiaries share a common population of interest but with different eligibility approaches.
What are the Eligibility Criteria?
- There are four eligibility approaches adopted to strengthen the integrity and reliability of the NSR. These include Geographic, Community Ranking, Community Based Targeting (CBT), and Proxy Mean Testing (PMT).
- Geographic targeting is achieved by targeting the LGAs in a participating state by their poverty status.
- Using the community ranking, the most deprived communities and households are targeted, using the availability or otherwise of some basic amenities and infrastructures.
- The community-based ranking approach is mostly facilitated by the Community–Based Targeting Team (CBTT) which comprises Targeting Officers and Enumerators. While the Targeting Officers identify the most vulnerable members in the community, the Enumerators are responsible for data capturing of the identified persons.
- By Proxy Mean Testing (PMT), a person is eligible to be on the register when their poverty status is ranked to feature between one to six deciles. A decile is a statistical term that divides the data into ten defined intervals. It divides data into smaller parts that are easier to measure, analyse and understand.
- In the light of the above, the viral WhatsApp message asking people to register for the proposed 18,000 cash transfer by the Federal government has been established to be fraudulent. This is because every individual eligible for the cash transfer is and must be captured by the National Social Safety Nets Coordinating Office (NASSCO).
- The NASSCO National Co-ordinator once stated that “each of those individuals has about 138 indicators attributed to them, from biodata to vocation, educational qualification, access to social amenities in the community, access to roads to the communities, access to drinking water” among others.
- Rather than using a suspicious website to register, NASSCO disclosed that satellite imagery and big data and SMS Blast are used for mapping urban slums.
In conclusion, while SMS Blast, satellite imagery and Big data are used to solicit registration in the urban areas, Geographic Mapping,, Community Ranking, Community Based Targeting (CBT), and Proxy Mean Testing (PMT) are part of the criteria for individual’s inclusion in the National Social Register before being eligible to the National Cash Transfer.
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1 Comment
Ikejiaku Chinwe
November 18, 2023, 6:22 pmIn this on going payment of national social registration. some of us that their account numbers begins with 00 before other figures follow up,were not paid the #25,000 that others are receiving.Every account number should be ten digits,but if your account number begins with 00 digit,you will not be paid.My account number is 0043900014 GTB bank
REPLYThe system removed the first two zeros making those account starting with zero not to receive the national social registration payment because the digits will no longer be ten digits as should every account number.