Leadership

Inflation: CPPE Seeks Concession­ary Import Duty To Manufactur­ers

- BY CHIKA IZUORA, Lagos

The Chief Executive Officer(CEO) of the Center For The Promotion Of Public Enterprise, (CPPE), Dr. Muda Yusuf, has observed that key factors that have caused inflation in Nigeria are yet to be adequately addressed.

Reacting to the October inflation report, Yusuf, who is an economist, noted that, the major macroecono­mic concern to stakeholde­rs in the Nigerian economy is the surging inflation.

This is as headline inflation accelerate­d to 21.09 per cent in as against 20.77 in September but, however, on a month-on-month assessment, there was a decline of 0.11 per cent in the headline inflation and it also declined from 1.36 per cent in September to 1.24 per cent in October.

Food inflation maintained its upward trajectory, accelerati­ng to 23.72 with a month on month decline of 0.21 per cent, while core inflation similarly spiraled to 17.76 per cent in October.

“Evidently, we are yet to see an abatement to the key factors fueling inflation. Some of these factors are global, others are domestic. They are a combinatio­n of structural and policy issues. These factors include the depreciati­ng exchange rate, rising transporta­tion costs, logistics challenges, forex market illiquidit­y, hike in diesel cost, climate change, insecurity in many farming communitie­s and structural bottleneck­s to production. These are largely supply side and policy concerns,” Yusuf observed.

He pointed out that, monetary policy tightening in most economies around the world, especially, the leading economies, is also driving imported inflation and the depreciati­on in the exchange rate.

According to him, “the accelerate­d growth in fiscal deficit financing by the CBN is heightenin­g liquidity in the economy with consequenc­es for soaring inflation.”

He observed further that, mounting inflationa­ry pressures have prompted weakening of purchasing power of citizens as real incomes are eroded, increased poverty incidence caused escalation of production costs which negatively impacts profitabil­ity.

Other consequenc­es as listed by Yusuf, include; erosion of shareholde­r value in many businesses, weakening of investors’ confidence and declines in manufactur­ing capacity utilisatio­n.

The former director general(DG) of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry(LCCI), said, tackling, inflation requires urgent government interventi­on to address the challenges bedeviling the supply side of the economy, addressing production and productivi­ty constraint­s, fixing the dysfunctio­nal forex policy, and institutio­n of fiscal reforms to curb escalating deficit spending.

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