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South Sudan to Benefit from World Bank’s Social Safety Net

The World Bank approved a $40 million International Development Association (IDA) grant for South Sudan Safety Net Project (SSSNP) which will expand access to safety net and provide income security for low income South Sudanese, while strengthening delivery tools and local level capacities.

”I am very pleased that South Sudan is receiving additional funding which will be used to build on the achievements of previous safety net projects while scaling up the provision of predictable and reliable cash transfers to vulnerable South Sudanese,”  said Hon. Josephine Joseph Lagu, Minister of Agriculture for the Republic of South Sudan. ”This will not only improve food security for thousands of people, but it will also increase their resilience to economic and climate-related crises or shocks,” she added.

Nearly 430,000 people will receive cash transfers in 10 counties across South Sudan, including Juba. Specifically, the project will provide cash transfers to the poorest and most vulnerable people for working on public works projects. It will also provide direct grants to those who are unable to work, including people with disabilities, the elderly and pregnant or breastfeeding women, among others. The Social safety net will also strengthen existing safety net tools and enhance local level to enable them to take a lead in their own development interventions.

”In the first phase, the Social safety net will scale up direct income support in Juba to provide rapid cash transfers to address emerging vulnerabilities amidst COVID 19 outbreak. As the COVID 19 situation subsides, cash transfers will be expanded in all the other project locations across the country,” said Husam Abudagga, World Bank Country Manager for South Sudan.

World Bank has provided safety net support to South Sudan since 2014, via investment targeted at poor and vulnerable households. It also helped to establish the building blocks of a national social protection system for effective and accountable delivery of safety net assistance while mitigating high operational, fiduciary and safeguards risks in the country.

The programme aims to strengthen the humanitarian-development nexus by addressing urgent needs in the short term, while strengthening community and institutional capacities in the medium term.

 

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