The Consumer Price Index (CPI), which is
used to gauge inflation in Nigeria, increased significantly by 92 per
cent in 2016, from 9.62 per cent in January, to 18.48 per cent in
November.
This clearly showed that inflationary
pressure was strong in 2016 as prices of goods and service rose
astronomically during the year. Inflation in 2016 rose far above the
upper boundary that was set by the central bank.
Although the CPI figures for December
would be released next month, it is largely expected to remain within
the 18 per cent band.
From 9.62 per cent in January, the CPI
climbed to 11.38 per cent February, 12.77 per cent in March and 13.77
per cent in April. Furthermore, it jumped to 15.58 per cent in May,
16.48 per cent in June, 17.13 per cent in July and 17.61 per cent in
August. In addition, the CPI edged higher to 17.85 in September, 18.33
per cent in October and 18.48 per cent in November. In all, the CPI rose
by 92 per cent in 2016.
The federal government recently said it
was targeting a growth rate of seven per cent between 2017 and 2020,
through its National Economic Recovery Growth Plan (NERGP). This is
expected to result to a drop in the CPI in the coming year.
The Minister of Budget and National
Planning, Senator Udo Udoma said the need for the plan and its effective
implementation was more imperative, given the current state of the
nation’s economy. The minister stated that every effort must be made to
ensure that the new plan eventually did not suffer the fate of those
before it. To ensure that the NERGP does not go the way of others, he
stated that the government was putting in place a delivery unit that
would drive its implementation through effective monitoring and
evaluation.
Udoma explained that the plan was
structured in such a way that it would be the basis for all subsequent
budgets, which was why the contribution and support of the National
Assembly was very critical to ensure the effective realisation of its
objectives.
The Director General of the West African
Institute for Financial and Economic Management, Prof. Akpan Ekpo,
recently told THISDAY that there was need for government to embark on
structural economic reform to tackle some of the challenges facing the
economy.
“Our economy only consumes, we do not
produce anything that brings foreign exchange. So, what you do is that
you direct policies that would encourage people to encourage and
manufacture, no matter how little, something that would add value,
before you export. What we need now are structural policies. What we
have seen is that the central bank has been doing a lot of what it ought
not to be doing. The central bank is pushing out a lot of intervention
funds. A lot of times, their intervention funds have fiscal coloration.
And that is not supposed to be their business.
“So for me, recessions are recurrent in
the market system. It comes and goes, but it gives you an opportunity to
make sure that you manage the economy properly. No two recessions are
alike. Also, they need experts to help them manage the economy. It is
not a tea party.
“They need technocrats to advise them.
And in our system, no government has a long-run luxury. Every government
has four years, so they have to move fast. My worry for Nigeria is more
than the economic recession. Let me ask you as question. If for
example, the next quarter Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth becomes
positive marginally, that means the economy may be out of recession. But
has the problem of unemployment been solved? Has that solved the
problem of inflation? Has that solved the poverty problem? It has not!
So, we need to carry out long-term structural reforms and be serious
about what we are doing,” Ekpo stressed.
Obinna Chima/Thisdaylive
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