THISDAY

Food Assistance Remains Critical Safety Net for the Poor, Says W’Bank Report

- Abimbola Akosile ABIMBOLA AKOSILE

A new World Bank report has revealed that food and voucher programmes provide an important lifeline for the poor and vulnerable, with 1.5 billion people covered globally. The report also noted that understand­ing how those programmes work, and how they connect to wider social protection systems is key to ensuring food security and helping the poor.

Nigeria, which recently marked its 57 years of independen­ce from colonial domination, is still battling the issue of food security, despite its classifica­tion as Africa’s largest economy and its descriptio­n as a middle-income nation.

Social protection systems include programmes that help manage shocks, connect vulnerable people to jobs, and address poverty and food insecurity, according to a World Bank release issued in Washington D.C., USA.

Food, which claims about 61 per cent of the poor’s expenditur­es, is a pressing daily concern for people at the bottom of the income ladder. An effective food-based social assistance programme can make a critical difference and help release household resources for other needs, it added.

The study, titled The 1.5 Billion People Question: Food, Vouchers or Cash Transfers?, reveals that, while countries increasing­ly support people with cash as a form of safety net, food-based programmes are still important interventi­ons in some contexts. The analysis highlights how food and voucher programmes remain relevant, and in most circumstan­ces, have improved over time.

“This report explores how to successful­ly integrate social protection mechanisms and food assistance,” says Michal Rutkowski, Senior Director for the World Bank’s Social Protection and Jobs Global Practice. “Understand­ing how programs have evolved and learning from different country experience­s enables us to adopt an evidence-based approach to protecting the poor and vulnerable, and helps policymake­rs deliver effective interventi­ons.”

The study shows that cash, vouchers, and food transfers are effective in improving food security; with the former two more likely to achieve these goals at lower costs. The report also discusses how the use of modern technology in food programmes shows enormous potential for improving these delivery systems.

For example, in some low-income states in India, technologi­cal tools helped to expand the coverage of food distributi­on and curb rates of exclusion of the poor from the programme.

Vouchers and cash transfers are shown to complement food-based transfers to support additional policy goals such as in nutrition and agricultur­e.

“Food and cash-based assistance are often portrayed as alternativ­es. Yet no social protection system is entirely in one form or the other. The report sheds light on why that’s the case, and what factors shape decisions around food based programmes” says Ugo Gentilini, World Bank Senior Economist and one of the co-editors of the study.

The diversity of contexts within countries - for example the availabili­ty of food in local markets - may call for maintainin­g flexibilit­y in programme choices. Political and economic factors, past practices, and the multiplici­ty of objectives can also help explain why government­s retain food-based interventi­ons.

Case studies of programmes in six countries, namely Egypt, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Sri Lanka, and the United States are presented in the study. Although these include middleand high-income countries, the lessons are relevant to lower-income countries as well.

 ??  ?? Small-scale entreprene­ur on duty at a motorbike repair spot in Accra, Ghana
Small-scale entreprene­ur on duty at a motorbike repair spot in Accra, Ghana

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