Library

3 published verifications about World Bank World Bank ×

“The World Bank's active portfolio in Nigeria stands at over $16.4 billion as of 2025.”

Misleading

The $16.4 billion figure is real but is attributed by the World Bank’s own Nigeria page to 2026, not 2025. The sources cited for 2025 generally only support a vaguer “over $16 billion” characterization, not the precise $16.4 billion number tied to that year. Other 2025 reporting also points to higher World Bank-related totals (often debt stock), making the claim’s “as of 2025” framing unreliable.

“In Bangladesh, English language learning begins at the pre-school level for children aged 3-5 years, with over 1.57 million children enrolled in pre-schools as of 2022.”

False

Both core assertions in this claim are unsupported by authoritative evidence. Bangladesh's official education policy places formal English instruction at the primary level (Class 1), not pre-primary, where the curriculum emphasizes mother tongue and basic skills. The "over 1.57 million" enrollment figure is a misattribution of a 2021 World Bank estimate for government primary schools only; verified 2022 data from BANBEIS reports only "around 1.5 million" enrolled, and this does not cover all pre-school types for the full 3-5 age range.

“Global mobile phone penetration rates exceed global basic sanitation coverage rates worldwide.”

Misleading

This claim is misleading because its truth depends entirely on which definitions you use. If "mobile penetration" means SIM subscriptions per capita (~99 per 100 people, ITU), it exceeds any sanitation metric — but that figure is inflated by people owning multiple SIM cards. The more meaningful comparison is unique mobile subscribers (~69–70%, GSMA) versus "at least basic" sanitation coverage (~74–77%, WHO/UNICEF JMP). On that like-for-like basis, basic sanitation actually exceeds mobile phone penetration, reversing the claim.