Nigeria Forms Nutrition Financing Subcommittee
Analysis based on 11 articles · First reported Mar 05, 2026 · Last updated Mar 06, 2026
The establishment of a Nutrition Financing Subcommittee and the push for the National Nutrition Bill in Nigeria are positive developments for the country's long-term human capital and economic stability. Improved nutrition outcomes could lead to a healthier workforce and reduced healthcare burdens, potentially attracting foreign investment in the future.
Nigeria's Nigeria===National Council on Nutrition (NCN), chaired by Vice President Kashim Shettima, has inaugurated a Nutrition Financing Subcommittee to develop a sustainable funding structure for the nation's nutrition interventions. The subcommittee, chaired by Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare Muhammad Ali Pate, includes several ministers and will present a financing roadmap within 30 days to the NCN and Nigeria===National Economic Council (NEC). Vice President Shettima emphasized the urgent need to 'ring-fence' nutrition financing to ensure budget allocations translate into tangible improvements and called for the swift passage of the National Nutrition Bill. He also stressed the importance of subnational ownership and grassroots engagement, encouraging state governors to accelerate the Accelerating Nutrition Results in Nigeria (ANRiN) 2.0 Project. Development partners like the Aliko Dangote Foundation and UNICEF are involved, reaffirming their commitment to supporting these initiatives across Nigeria.
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