The National Nutrition Financing Technical Committee, established with the support of the World Bank under the Accelerating Nutrition Results in Nigeria (ANRiN) Project, has made a significant advocacy push towards ensuring the prioritisation of nutrition interventions in Nigeria’s upcoming national budget in the 2025 fiscal year.
At a high-level visit to the director-general of the Budget Office of the Federation, Mr Tanimu Yakubu, the committee aimed to secure support for addressing the country’s food and nutrition crisis, which ongoing socio-economic challenges have exacerbated.
The Nutrition Finance Committee comprises key stakeholders, including the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning, Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, representatives from the Office of the Vice President, Budget Office of the Federation, Accountant-General of the Federation, Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF), World Bank, Results for Development, and the Civil Society Scaling Up Nutrition in Nigeria (CS-SUNN).
During the visit, the committee emphasised the need for evidence-based nutrition interventions to be prioritised in the 2025 budgets of relevant Ministries, Departments, and Agencies of government (MDAs) and for the nutrition budget envelope to be expanded to meet Nigeria’s growing needs.
Furthermore, the visit reiterated that MDAs tagging nutrition budgets using the nationally adopted nutrition budget tagging framework would foster nutrition resource tracking regarding appropriation, releases, and implementation.
The meeting laid the foundation for more vital multi-sectoral collaboration and highlighted the urgency of securing sustainable financing to combat malnutrition and promote healthier food systems nationwide.
Following the visit, the Task Team Leader of the Accelerating Nutrition Results in Nigeria Project, Dr Ritgak Tilley-Gyado, explained that the inclusion of nutrition in budget circulars was realised two years ago and continues to apply learning and adaptation to ensure greater effectiveness. She further stated that it is part of a broader set of analytical efforts and public financial management reforms that include allocative efficiency analysis for budget prioritisation, all geared towards ensuring domestic resources are increased and efficiently applied to tackle malnutrition and improve human capital. These complement the bottom-up sustainable financing frameworks co-developed by the ANRiN Project and Sustainable Financing for Nutrition (SUSTAIN), a project financed by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation across the 12 ANRiN Implementing States.
Meanwhile, budget data from the last three years have shown gradual growth of domestic resources for nutrition in the federal budgets, from N10.8 billion in 2021 to N6.5 billion in 2023 and N18.0 billion in 2024. This significant leap in domestic budgets has been credited to a push by the National Council on Nutrition, led by Vice-President Kashim Shettima.
Mrs. Uju Anwukah, Special Assistant to the President on Public Health in the Office of the Vice-President, stated the need to continue building on the foundations to expand national and subnational domestic resources for nutrition while leveraging available external financing from development partners and fostering innovative partnerships with the private sector. She also expressed that establishing Legislative Committees on Food Security and Nutrition would enable more vital collaboration between the legislative and executive arms to tackle Nigeria’s challenges headlong.
The advocacy visits and ongoing engagements on Nutrition financing underscore the commitment of key stakeholders to address the growing concerns of food security and malnutrition in Nigeria. By leveraging this partnership with the Budget Office of the Federation, the ANRiN Project and its partners hope to build a more sustainable and well-funded nutrition ecosystem, ensuring that nutrition interventions reach the most vulnerable populations and contribute to Nigeria’s broader socio-economic development.
The Supervising Director for the ANRiN Project highlighted that tackling malnutrition requires long-term political will, financing commitments and institutional capacity. She specified that the institutionalisation of nutrition in sector budgets at the national and state levels would ensure that innovative solutions promoted through the ANRiN Project can be sustained beyond the project’s life to support Nigeria on this long-term mission of improving its people’s well-being, health and development.
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