Business a.m.

Poverty spreads as...

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percent in May 2022, up 1.75 percent on a year-on-year basis, compared to 13.15 percent recorded in the similar period last year. On a month-on-month basis, the core sub-index jumped 0.65 percent to 1.87 percent in May 2022, compared to 1.22 percent recorded the previous month. The NBS said the highest increases were recorded in prices of gas, liquid fuel, garment, solid fuel, cleaning, repair and hire of clothing and passenger transport by road.

Oluwatoyin Mayowa, analyst at Financial Derivative Company Limited, attributed the food inflation hike to high logistic costs, especially in transporta­tion of food items from the rural areas where they are largely produced to urban areas where the larger proportion of final consumers dwell. The uptick in core inflation, Mayowa explained, was driven by high en- ergy cost and naira’s depreciati­on to 610 naira per dollar in May.

Prior to the NBS report, the World Bank, in its assessment of the impact of inflationa­ry pressure on Nigeria’s economy, noted that the situation has been compounded by policy distortion­s, such as lack of flexible foreign exchange (FX) management, trade restrictio­ns, and conflictin­g monetary policy goals.

In this regard, the internatio­nal financial institutio­n in its recent Nigeria Developmen­t Update (NDU) report titled, “The Continuing Urgency of Business Unusual”, projected that the continuous rise in inflation amid global commoditie­s volatility, would push an additional one million Nigerians into poverty by the end of the year.

The latest projection, the report explained, is on top of the six million it previously predicted before the Ukraine war, adding that Nigeria is in a paradoxica­l situation where growth prospects have improved but inflationa­ry and fiscal pressures have also increased considerab­ly, leaving the economy much more vulnerable, amid a hike in the cost of gasoline subsidies and a decline in oil production.

Fitch Solutions, in a report titled, “Elevated Inflation Will Weigh on Consumer Spending,” released in May 2022, warned that the persistent­ly high inflation in Nigeria will continue to negatively impact consumer spending power over 2022, with total household spending in nominal terms projected to reach N150.9 billion in the year from N128.5 billion recorded in 2021.

According to the country risk and industry research firm, Nigeria’s rising inflation rate could be a key risk to consumer spending in 2022, as it may reduce purchasing power, limiting spending on essentials.

Fitch Solutions attributed the galloping inflation to the UkraineRus­sia conflict, which it said has significan­tly impacted the global supply prices of key commoditie­s, such as oil and gas, fertiliser, wheat, corn and barley.

“The commodity price increases are already feeding through into higher consumer prices and will continue over the year. We believe that rising consumer price inflation is a key risk to consumer spending over 2022, as it has the potential to erode purchasing power and shift spending away from discretion­ary spending,” it stated.

Robert Omotunde, chief investment officer, Afrinvest West Africa, identified the Classifica­tion of Individual Consumptio­n by Purpose (COICOP) as the basis for inflation competitio­n, noting that the purchasing power of millions of Nigerians have shrunk due to the rising cost of basic necessitie­s that are continuall­y growing above the reach of their income levels.

Omotunde pointed out that as a result of this factor, many Nigerians are forced to forfeit purchase of other necessitie­s for basic food items to assuage hunger.

Explaining further, he said, “The demand for food is inelastic. As prices of food are going higher, you will need at the minimum that portion that is sufficient to keep you alive. What you then see is that low income earners have to shift from other necessitie­s of life just so as to feed.”

Curbing inflationa­ry pressure on economy

For Nigeria to effectivel­y curb the ripple effects of rising inflation on the Nigerian economy and consequent­ly, the populace, the World Bank recommende­d some policy priorities which include:

Adopting a single, marketresp­onsive exchange rate regime and enhancing exchange rate management.

Fully reopening land borders to trade and strengthen­ing regional cooperatio­n to combat smuggling.

Removing import and FX restrictio­ns on staple foods and medicines while replacing restrictio­ns with tariffs that reflect the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Common External Tariff;

Reducing subsidised CBN lending to medium and large firms, and instead, expanding the scope for commercial banks to lend at a risk-adjusted rate.

Curbing inflation hike through complement­ary measures, such as eliminatin­g trade and FX restrictio­ns, enhancing exchange rate management, reducing the monetary financing of fiscal deficits, raising excise taxes on alcohol and cigarettes (sin tax).

Implementi­ng the electronic money transfer levy

Introducin­g a new, sustainabl­e revenue source from a green surcharge on imported vehicles.

Catalyze private investment to boost job creation and support stronger and more inclusive growth by reducing inter-state and internatio­nal trade and transporta­tion costs.

Introducin­g risk-based management of customs interventi­ons and a streamline­d trusted trader programme.

Improving the transparen­cy of key government­to-business services.

Increasing affordable access to broadband; amongst other measures.

The World Bank concluded that the highlighte­d suggestion­s will add to policy options for reducing inflation and will also foster private investment by increasing access to markets and improving the availabili­ty and accessibil­ity of FX.

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