Cash Barometer Nigeria

Author(s)
Ground Truth Solutions
Publication language
English
Pages
pp18
Date published
20 Nov 2020
Type
Impact assessment
Keywords
Cash-based transfers (CBT), COVID-19, Epidemics & pandemics, Food security, Clean Water and Sanitation (SDG)
Countries
Nigeria

After more than a decade of conflict and violent insurgency by the non-state armed group Boko Haram, some 7.9 million people in Nigeria’s Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states (collectively known as the BAY states) were expected to be in need of humanitarian assistance in 2020. Since the onset of Covid-19, this number has increased to 10.6 million, or more than half the population of those states in the country’s north-eastern region.

To support the most vulnerable, 35 aid providers, including national and international NGOs and United Nations agencies, are providing Cash and Voucher Assistance (CVA) throughout the BAY states as of August 2020. These organisations reach 1,785,338 individuals, focussing on food security. Transfers are made through direct cash-in-hand, as paper or electronic vouchers restricted to specific stores and markets, pre-paid cards, bank transfers, and mobile money. Borno State hosts the majority of CVA recipients in Nigeria (71%), followed by Yobe (27%) and Adamawa states (2%).

This survey aims to understand how recipients of such transfers in the BAY states experience the aid provided. The objective is to optimise CVA programming based on their feedback, to set a basis for monitoring progress on the quality and relevance of CVA assistance in the future, and to track perceptions over time.

Authors: 
Ground Truth Solutions