FG Promises Transparent And Accountable Social Investment Delivery

by HEDNEWS on February 16, 2026

FG Promises Transparent and Accountable Social Investment Delivery

  • The Federal Government of Nigeria has affirmed its commitment to ensuring that social investment programmes and fiscal interventions are delivered transparently and efficiently, particularly under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.
  • Dr. Doris Nkiruka Uzoka-Anite, the Minister of State for Finance, emphasised through official government messages and social media that social investment initiatives including interest-free loans for smallholder farmers and credit support for traders will be administered openly, with accountability and speed to reach the intended beneficiaries.
  • The minister highlighted that the ₦300,000 targeted, interest-free loans and credit facilities are being tracked closely to ensure they go to genuine recipients, reinforcing the government’s pledge to promote inclusive economic empowerment and grassroots support.
    CLEAR GOALS TRANSPARENCY & DELIVERY
  • Uzoka-Anite said the Ministry of Finance is focused on transparent disbursement mechanisms, reducing leakages, and simplifying access to funds for vulnerable groups, especially small-scale farmers and petty traders.
  • The government’s strategy links social investment transparency with broader economic reforms from digital identity systems and financial inclusion policies to citizen-centric budget implementation aimed at strengthening trust and effectiveness in public programmes.
    BROAD CONTEXT GOVERNMENT REFORM AGENDA
  • The commitment to transparency and accountability is part of wider fiscal and economic reforms under the Tinubu administration’s Renewed Hope Agenda, which includes efforts to redirect resources from subsidy burdens to critical social services and empowerment schemes.
  • Related government actions include dialogues with stakeholders on financial inclusion, digital identity rollouts, and financial sector reforms to expand access to credit and minimise barriers to formal finance, further supporting the social investment ecosystem.
  • If fully implemented, the transparent rollout of social investments could mean quicker support for vulnerable households, increased access to credit for small businesses, and improved accountability in the use of public funds.
  • Civil society and market observers have noted that transparent social investment delivery is key to bolstering confidence in government programmes, limiting corruption risks, and ensuring that targeted economic support makes tangible impacts. (analysis based on broader policy context)