Twenty Nigerian states have qualified to receive a combined $27 million in performance-based grants under the World Bank-supported Human Capital Opportunities for Prosperity and Equity (HOPE) Governance Programme after meeting reform targets in education, primary healthcare and public financial management.
The funding rewards measurable progress rather than promises, encouraging states to strengthen planning, budgeting, transparency and service delivery.
The announcement was made on Tuesday in Abuja by the National Coordinator of the HOPE Governance Programme, Dr. Assad Hassan, during a retreat for Commissioners, Permanent Secretaries and Directors of Budget and Planning.
According to Hassan, the grants were awarded after an independent assessment by the Interim Independent Verification Agent (IVA), which verified states' performance against the programme's Year Zero Disbursement-Linked Results (DLRs).
Bayelsa, Borno, Kano, Kebbi and Yobe each qualified for $1.5 million under DLR 2.1 for adopting comprehensive guidelines for consolidated basic education work plans. The same states also earned another $1.5 million each under DLR 2.2 for adopting comprehensive guidelines for consolidated primary healthcare work plans.
Under DLR 2.3, Adamawa, Bayelsa, Borno, Delta, Gombe, Kano, Plateau, Taraba and Yobe will each receive $500,000 after adopting harmonised local government budget guidelines and a standard chart of accounts.
Another 15 states of Abia, Bayelsa, Borno, Edo, Ekiti, Enugu, Imo, Jigawa, Kano, Kebbi, Kogi, Nasarawa, Ondo, Plateau and Yobe, qualified for $500,000 each under DLR 4.1 after publishing their 2025 Citizens' Budgets for basic education and primary healthcare.
Hassan said other participating states did not qualify because they failed to meet the required benchmarks, missed submission deadlines or did not publish the required documents on their official websites.
The HOPE Governance Programme is a $500 million World Bank-backed initiative domiciled in the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning. It was launched in December 2025 to strengthen financing, transparency, accountability and workforce management across Nigeria's basic education and primary healthcare sectors.
Of the total funding, $480 million has been set aside for performance-based grants, while the remaining $20 million will provide technical assistance, institutional strengthening and implementation support. The programme is being implemented in partnership with state governments, the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, the Basic Health Care Provision Fund oversight structures, and the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning.
The World Bank approved the programme in September 2024 after negotiations concluded a month earlier. The Federal Executive Council approved the financing agreement in February 2025 before it was countersigned in April and became effective in September 2025.
By linking funding to verified reforms, the HOPE Governance Programme is expected to help states improve planning, financial management, transparency and the delivery of quality education and primary healthcare services across Nigeria.
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