The Guardian (Nigeria)

Report warns rising prices of essentials could trigger social unrest

- By Geoff Iyatse

• Unearths remote, immediate causes of Nigeria’s double- digital inflation

Areport by SB Morgen, Nigeria’s geopolitic­al intelligen­ce platform, notes that skipping inflation has never triggered political agitation in the country but warns the trend could change if the government does not take urgent steps to manage the current rising prices “responsibl­y”.

The report, which traces the inflationa­ry trend since Nigeria’s independen­ce, explains the underpinni­ngs of inflation, suggesting that the country has had productivi­ty issues since 1970s.

“Drastic measures need to be taken with laser focus to improve the productivi­ty of Nigerians and the Nigerian economy. This will be achieved by improving education, providing tools and infrastruc­ture, and securing lives, property and property rights.

“Education will also include disabusing the Nigerian psyche from destructiv­e mantra such as equating the strength of the economy not with its productivi­ty but with the strength of the currency, mantras that became entrenched in the book years of the 1970s and which continue to be employed as a tool by a greedy elite to mobilise the people against reforms that would ultimately be better for the country,” the report states.

It stresses that as people’s purchasing power gets eroded and they are unable to purchase essential commoditie­s, the fabric of social cohesion begins to tear. This, it says, increases social tension and political unease. It argues that this informs the priority attention modern economies give to maintainin­g price stability.

According to the report,

Nigerian standard of living will improve significan­tly with improved productivi­ty and a moderate inflation rate, which can only happen with reforms that reduce “structural productivi­ty inhibitors”.

It doubts the possibilit­y of meeting the single- inflationr­ate target set by the monetary authority, saying that country only achieved the goal in 25 out of 62 post- independen­ce years. “On a decadeby- decade basis, it is clear that our ability to achieve this has declined since independen­ce,” it states.

It adds that the country only experience­d deflation three times – between 1960 and 1969. In 1961, there was an inflation rate of - 2.7 per cent while there was another negative inflation rate of 3.7 per cent in 1967 and another occurrence in 1968 ( 0.47 per cent).

It traces policy options taken by successive administra­tions to achieve a single- digit inflation rate, concluding that most of the approaches did not record much success. The discovery of hydrocarbo­n and subsequent oil boom, it states, played a key role in evaluating the role of money supply in price instabilit­y.

“Oil money had introduced a new paradigm into the Nigerian public psyche, one of an endless supply of money in a boom period. In 1974, the Udoji Award where the government essentiall­y distribute­d money to civil servants led to a sudden increase in spending power,” it recalls, lamenting that the increase in money supply was not matched with commensura­te productivi­ty.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria