Nigeria’s headline inflation held steady
at 9.2 percent in July, same as the previous month, on account of muted
price rises in the Food and Non Alcoholic Beverages, Housing, Water,
Electricity, Gas and Other Fuel, and Furnishings and Household Equipment
Maintenance divisions, among others.
But high cost of petrol, at over N100
per litre average across the country, which is well above the N87
official pump price, continues to weigh on local consumer prices.
In July, petrol sold the least average
price of N92/litre in just two states – Kano and Lagos, while the
product was costliest in Taraba at N130/litre, according to latest
figures from the National Bureau of Statistics.
The Food Sub-index, according to the
NBS, rose by 10 percent (year-on-year) in July, increasing at the same
pace for the second consecutive month.
The bureau noted that although rates
recorded in June and July remained the highest for the year, a slower
increase in the Meats, Fish, Fruits and “Potatoes, Yams and Tubers”
groups weighted on the Food Sub-index as a whole.
Faster price increases were observed in
the “Bread and Cereals,” “Milk, Cheese and Eggs” and “Oils and Fats”
groups, while the pace of increase in the price of vegetables held
constant over the June and July figures, the federal data office further
noted in its a Consumer Price Index (CPI) report.
Since December 2014, Nigeria’s inflation
has risen steadily, first, on account of a weak naira, and then high
cost of petrol, which moved up transportation costs reasonably.
Nigeria does not yet target inflation,
but the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has adopted a 6-9 percent single
digit band as a guide. The band had been widely achieved for 31 months
now, but there are fears that inflation could jump to double digits
before year-end, considering the pace of price movement, especially
attributable to cost of transportation and imports.
The NBS in the CPI report released this
Wednesday morning, indicated that core inflation measured by the prices
of the “All Items less Farm Produce” increased even at a faster pace in
July.
“The Core Sub-index increased by 8.8
percent (year-on-year), 0.4 percentage points from 8.4 recorded in June,
with the highest pressures observed in the Transportation, Education
and Miscellaneous Good and Services divisions,” NBS said.
But the pace of increases slowed in
multiple divisions such as the Communications, Recreation and Culture,
and Restaurant and Hotels divisions.
While the Urban inflation
(year-on-year) stayed relatively unchanged at 9.2 percent from rates
recorded in June, the Rural index increased marginally by 9.2 percent,
from 9.1 percent in June.
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