Nigeria inflation climbs to 28-year high in March
Nigeria's inflation kept climbing in March, reaching a 28-year high of 33.20 per cent in annual terms, driven by soaring food and energy costs despite central bank rate hikes aimed at halting its ascent.
The latest data from the
National Bureau of Statistics marks the 15th month in a row that consumer
inflation had risen. It was 31.70% in February.
Inflation has not been this
high in Africa's largest economy and most populous nation since early 1996,
leaving millions of people struggling to meet basic needs.
President Bola Tinubu
The statistics office
said food and non-alcoholic beverages were the biggest contributors to the
pickup in inflation.
Food inflation rose
to 40.01 per cent year-on-year, from 37.92 per cent a month earlier.
Price pressures have been
spurred by reforms implemented by President Bola Tinubu in his first year in
charge, chiefly ending a costly petrol subsidy and twice devaluing the naira
currency.
The government also
recently increased electricity tariffs for consumers who use the most
power as it seeks to wean the economy off subsidies that have weighed on public
finances.
Last week Tinubu's
government began distributing 42,000 tons of grains such as corn, sorghum and
millet to help vulnerable households.
The central bank has
twice raised interest rates this year to try to get price pressures under
control and expects inflation to moderate from May.
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