Why we’re building Scalable Digital Coordination Systems for Vulnerable Widows in Sub-Saharan Africa
Seeking feedback, critical review, research collaboration and potential support for The WApp Solution - WIDOWS DIGITAL HUB
Summary
Widows are among the most economically vulnerable and socially excluded populations in many parts of Sub-Saharan Africa, yet they receive relatively little targeted attention within global development, philanthropy and effective altruism.
We’re developing The WApp Solution (Widows Digital Hub), a mobile-first digital coordination platform designed to connect vulnerable widows to financial inclusion systems, livelihood opportunities, service providers, implementing partners, donors, and community support networks.
Our central hypothesis is:
A low-cost digital coordination system can significantly improve the efficiency, reach, transparency and effectiveness of interventions serving widows, while generating valuable evidence on how to support a highly neglected population at scale.
We would welcome feedback from the EA community on the intervention design, theory of change, measurement framework, cost-effectiveness assumptions and potential pathways for rigorous evaluation.
Focus on Widows:
Across many low-income settings, widowhood is associated with:
Although substantial efforts exist around women's empowerment, poverty alleviation and financial inclusion, widows are rarely treated as a distinct target population despite facing unique vulnerabilities.
This raises an EA-relevant question:
Could improving the coordination and accessibility of support systems for widows generate substantial welfare gains for a highly underserved population?
1. Scale
One reason we believe this problem deserves greater attention is its potential scale.
Globally, there are hundreds of millions of widows, with a significant proportion living in low- and middle-income countries. Many face economic insecurity, social exclusion and barriers to accessing services and opportunities.
Sub-Saharan Africa contains large populations of widows due to:
The WApp Solution is designed as digital infrastructure rather than a geographically fixed program.
The intended scaling pathway is:
Phase 1: Pilot
Phase 2: Regional Expansion
Phase 3: Multi-Country Platform
Long-Term Goal
Because the platform is digital, marginal costs per additional beneficiary are expected to decline substantially as adoption increases.
If successful, WApp could function as shared infrastructure used by:
rather than operating as a standalone service provider.
2. Neglectedness
Neglectedness appears to be one of the strongest arguments for exploring this intervention.
Many development programs target:
Very few focus specifically on widows.
Yet widows often experience overlapping disadvantages:
In many rural communities, widows remain largely invisible within formal data systems.
As a result:
The lack of dedicated infrastructure creates coordination failures that may reduce the effectiveness of existing resources.
Rather than creating another standalone aid program, WApp attempts to address this coordination gap.
3. Cost-Effectiveness
At this stage, we view cost-effectiveness estimates as preliminary and in need of further refinement.
However, the intervention has several characteristics that may make it relatively cost-effective.
Digital Infrastructure Can Be Reused
Unlike many direct-service interventions, a digital platform can serve multiple purposes simultaneously:
The same infrastructure can support many stakeholders.
Low Marginal Cost
After development costs, onboarding additional widows is expected to be significantly cheaper than building entirely new delivery systems.
Improved Targeting
Better data and coordination could help:
Community-Based Delivery
The pilot leverages existing widow-led networks through the Samia Widows Aid & Protection Center (SWAPC), reducing recruitment and trust-building costs.
One of the project's priorities is to rigorously estimate:
We would particularly appreciate EA feedback on which outcome measures would be most useful.
4. Evidence and Theory of Change
The WApp Solution is not based on the assumption that technology alone solves poverty.
Instead, the theory of change builds upon existing evidence that:
Research has found that access to mobile money and financial services can improve household resilience and economic participation.
Many vulnerable populations fail to access services simply because they lack awareness, connectivity or referral pathways.
Improving connections between producers and markets can increase income opportunities.
Fragmented systems often create inefficiencies for both beneficiaries and service providers.
Mobile technologies allow interventions to scale more rapidly than traditional face-to-face approaches alone.
The hypothesis being tested is:
Combining digital access, service coordination, financial inclusion, and community networks into one platform can improve outcomes more effectively than isolated interventions delivered independently.
Proposed Pilot
The initial pilot will be implemented through Samia Widows Aid & Protection Center (SWAPC) in Busia County, Kenya with minimum target 1,000 widows.
Core Functions
We will highly appreciate;
Feedback on:
Advice on:
Connections to:
Potential Support:
We have created a project page on Manifund and would be grateful for community feedback and support as we pursue project fundraising
Manifund Link: https://manifund.org/projects/the-wapp-solution---widows-digital-hub
Open Questions for the EA Community
Conclusion
The WApp Solution is an attempt to explore whether scalable digital infrastructure can improve the lives of one of the most overlooked populations in development: vulnerable widows.
Rather than assuming the model works, we hope to test it rigorously, learn quickly and share results openly.
If successful, the project could provide a replicable approach for improving economic inclusion, service coordination and resilience among widows across Sub-Saharan Africa and beyond.
We welcome feedback, criticism and suggestions from the EA community.