Financial inclusion, socioeconomic shocks and social protection in Nigeria amidst COVID-19 pandemic

Romanus Osabohien, Amar Hisham Jaaffar, Nora Yusma Mohamed Yusoff, Joshua Ibrahim, Timothy A. Aderemi, Andaratu A. Khalid, Lim Kim Yew, Okey Oyama Ovat

Article ID: 3616
Vol 8, Issue 7, 2024

VIEWS - 350 (Abstract) 252 (PDF)

Abstract


Financial inclusion and social protection have been recognised as the primary essential stimuli from the potential they carry as avenues for economic development, especially with respect to reduction in poverty and inequalities, the creation of employment and the enhancement overall welfare and livelihood. However, inclusive access to financial resources and equitable access to social protection interventions have remained a significant concern in Nigeria. In addition, the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic exposed the weakness of Nigeria in all sectors of the economy such as energy, health, education and food systems and low-level inclusive access to financial resources and social protection coverage. On the other hand, this study argues that financial inclusion and social protection has the potential to mitigation shocks orchestrated by the COVID-19 pandemic. This study empirically examines how social protection interventions and access to financial resources responded to COVID-19 pandemic. The study made use of data sourced from the World Bank’s COVID-19 national longitudinal phone survey 2020 and applied the logit regression. The findings show that social protection and access to financial resources significantly associated with the likelihood of shock mitigation during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results show that social protection intervention reduces the probability of being severely affected by shocks by 0.431. Given this result, the study recommends that the government should put more effort into proper social protection intervention to mitigate the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic.


Keywords


COVID-19 pandemic; energy, financial inclusion; poverty reduction; socioeconomic shocks; social protection; sustainable development goals

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.24294/jipd.v8i7.3616

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