Rwanda’s development journey is one of the most remarkable stories of our time. A core pillar of this national transformation has been a deep commitment to social protection. Moving far beyond simple welfare, Rwanda has strategically designed its programs to create a structured pathway for its most vulnerable citizens—those living in ultra-poverty—to achieve sustainable self-reliance. This journey, widely known as the “graduation model,” is a holistic and dignified process that builds human capital, assets, and long-term resilience.
The Challenge of Ultra-Poverty
Ultra-poverty is more than just a lack of income; it is a complex trap. It is characterized by chronic food insecurity, a lack of productive assets, poor health, social exclusion, and extreme vulnerability to any shock, be it a family illness, a drought, or an economic downturn. For households caught in this state, a simple cash transfer may provide temporary relief, but it is often insufficient to break the intergenerational cycle of poverty.
Recognizing this, Rwanda’s social protection strategy, a key part of its Vision 2050 framework, aims for “sustainable graduation.” The goal is not just to manage poverty but to methodically end it, one household at a time.
The “Graduation Model”: A Multi-faceted Pathway
The graduation model is a comprehensive approach that provides a “big push” of sequenced, multi-faceted support. It addresses the complex barriers that keep people trapped in ultra-poverty. While programs vary, they are built on several key components that work in harmony:
- Livelihood Protection: The first step is to provide stability and security. This consumption support (in the form of food or cash transfers) ensures a household’s basic survival needs are met. This frees them from a state of constant crisis and gives them the mental bandwidth to plan for the future.
- Asset Promotion: Once stable, participants receive a productive asset. This could include livestock (such as goats or chickens), agricultural inputs (seeds and tools), or the seed capital to start a small retail business. This asset forms the foundation of a new, sustainable livelihood.
- Human Capital Development: This is arguably the most critical component. Participants receive technical training on how to manage their new asset (e.g., animal husbandry, modern farming techniques). This is paired with financial literacy to manage savings and business income. Crucially, it also involves regular coaching and mentorship to build confidence, shift mindsets from “day-to-day survival” to “long-term planning,” and foster a spirit of entrepreneurship.
- Social & Financial Inclusion: Participants are integrated into community-based saving groups. This fosters a habit of saving, provides access to small, safe loans, and establishes a vital social support network that serves as a micro-insurance policy against future shocks.
Why This Model is So Important
Adopting the graduation model is not just a different way to distribute aid; it is a fundamental shift in the philosophy of development. Its importance cannot be overstated.
- It Breaks the Cycle of Dependency: Traditional welfare can sometimes create long-term dependency. The graduation model is, by design, temporary and transformative. It’s a “hand-up, not just a handout.” The goal is to build households that are so resilient they no longer need social protection, ending intergenerational poverty.
- It Builds True Resilience: The multi-faceted approach is the key. A cash transfer alone is spent. But a family that has an asset (a goat), the skills to manage it (animal husbandry), and savings in a group (financial inclusion) can withstand a shock. If an illness strikes, they can sell a kid goat or take a small loan from their savings group, rather than selling their only asset or falling back into hunger.
- It Fosters Dignity and Self-Reliance: This model is built on investing in people and believing in their potential. By providing skills, assets, and mentorship, it empowers individuals to become the architects of their own prosperity. This fosters a profound sense of dignity, confidence, and self-reliance that is, itself, a powerful engine for continued growth.
- It’s a Sustainable National Strategy: From a national perspective, the graduation model is a wise, sustainable investment. Instead of a budget line for permanently supporting the same vulnerable population, it becomes a revolving fund for human transformation. As one cohort “graduates,” they become productive, tax-paying members of the economy, freeing up resources to support the next group in need.
Our Contribution: Building a Resilient Rwanda
This comprehensive model is not just a government endeavor; it is actively implemented and innovated upon by non-profit organizations on the ground. At the Rwanda Organization for Development Initiatives (RODI), we take pride in being an active partner in this national mission. Our work focuses on creating these pathways, ensuring that social protection is not a permanent destination but a springboard to self-reliance.
Our contribution to social protection extends across many of our programs:
- Direct Poverty Graduation: Our most direct interventions include the Poverty Alleviation Coalition (PAC 1), which empowered 3,000 households (both refugee and host communities). We are proud that by 2024, 95% of participants will have graduated from extreme poverty, adopting positive mindsets and becoming self-reliant. Our Kora Wigire (PAC 2) project, in partnership with World Vision and Caritas Rwanda, further scaled this success by using the Ultra-Poor Graduation (UPG) model to support 3,800 vulnerable households with comprehensive training, mentorship, and financial support.
- Protecting the Next Generation: We believe social protection begins with children. Our Early Childhood Development (ECD) program is a critical long-term investment. By monitoring and supporting home-based, community-based, and center-based facilities, and by training caregivers, we ensure that Rwanda’s most vulnerable children receive the nutrition, stimulation, and safety needed for holistic development. This is the very foundation of breaking the poverty cycle.
- Empowering Vulnerable Youth and Women: We implement projects that serve as a direct pathway to economic independence for those at risk of exclusion. Projects like HUGUKA DUKORE AKAZI KANOZE and MFASHA KWIFASHA equipped vulnerable youth with the market-relevant skills and work readiness needed for employment. Our Gender Equality Promotion, utilizing tools such as the Gender Action Learning System (GALS), empowers women and girls to build confidence, start businesses, and take on leadership roles, directly addressing the social and economic barriers that can lead to poverty.
- Supporting Displaced & At-Risk Populations: Our ongoing Dukore TWIGIRE Project (DTP) focuses on forcibly displaced populations and their host communities—a key vulnerable group. By supporting sustainable income activities, we are building resilience and self-reliance. Similarly, our Learning and Inclusion for Transformation (LIFT) project provides financial support and training to help out-of-school children re-enter education, protecting their future.
- Building Community Resilience: Social protection also means strengthening the community structures that support everyone. Our work with smallholder farmers through projects like Farmers Voice/IJWI RY’ABAHINZI BOROZI, as well as our support for agricultural cooperatives, builds collective resilience. When farmers are organized and food secure, the entire community is better protected from shocks.
A Future of Dignity and Self-Reliance
Social protection in Rwanda is a powerful testament to the belief that, given the right tools and a supportive environment, everyone can achieve economic independence. It is a ladder, not just a safety net. By combining immediate protection with long-term promotion of assets, skills, and social inclusion, this model offers a dignified and sustainable pathway out of extreme poverty. It is a journey we are fully committed to, innovating in our actions to help build a future of resilience, dignity, and genuine self-reliance for all Rwandans.
