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Monday, December 30, 2024
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How Failed Government Policies Fuel Food Inflation

Food, food and food remain the most constant nutritional and vitamin value humans cannot do without. Our existence depends on it, or else humanity will go to extinction. We cannot dare joke about the lack of food. Nobody has made food its enemy.

These are the reasons why serious nations make deliberate efforts toward not just having food security, but making it strategically abundant, available, and affordable for the people. In other words, there is greater attention to government policy direction that defines food, essentially, as the number one priority on the scale of preference. In this regard, the policy to make food available all year round and affordable is not toiled with no matter what the economic technical conundrum calls it inflation or food inflation.

Food must be on the table for every household. Recently, there were soaring energy and food prices, with inflation of over 7.5% in the USA and above 5% in Europe and the UK. Their government is not sleeping over the situation. Taming food inflation headlong through pragmatic efforts has been deployed, because they grasp deeply the social cost of food inflation beyond just the economic technicality of it.

What then is Inflation?

With hindsight, a simplistic definition of inflation is the general rise in the prices of goods and services in a particular country, at a particular period, which results in a fall in the value of money.

In this way, inflation simply devalues and weakens a country’s currency, as well as erodes the purchasing power of income and wages available for workers to spend on food and other desired needs.

Significantly, food inflation if let loose, would affect mostly the poor who are greatly vulnerable. Nigerians are asking what is fuelling food inflation in the country. Specifically, they want to know how the government policies failed to tame food inflation. Because the Governments present or passed we acknowledge always have one or more projects in this direction.

Space would not permit us to begin a narrative around failed government policies, formulated and partially or fully implemented before 1999. However, Nigerians will never forget how the military government truncated the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and Rolling Development Plans. A sizeable segment of these development plans focuses on food self-sufficiency and economic self-reliance through local resource development. Moreso, that they are laudable economic frameworks with multi-sectoral approaches, they were jettisoned due to a lack of government policy continuity.

Meanwhile, a modest history of how our nation’s policy economics has been formulated and implemented since 1999 when the civil democratic government returned, showed nothing significant has been achieved to address the economic challenges. And, for us, one of such troubling issues is the rising food inflation.

Noticeably, the aftermath of successive Governments in Nigeria’s failure on policy economics always gets every concerned citizen thinking and one would wonder how we got so deep in the mess we found ourselves in, even though we are a resources-blessed nation.

Surprisingly we are not lacking in policies or policy formulation and development ideas as a point of departure in our clime. This, in fact, demonstrates why a lot is expected from us as African most populous people with brilliant minds and skills.

Sadly, Nigerians are looked down upon as our green passport on any immigration desk outside our shore is scrutinised and interrogated under heavy suspicion. Why? Because we by ourselves are careless about dignity. What the outside has come to know about us is the ‘corruption’ and ‘looting’ of public funds that permeated our government structures as exhibited by people who are lucky to have been elected or appointed.

Some of us as political economists or economists are ashamed and disappointed because the government over time would always create the impression of walking the talk of many of its policy economics. Alas! To the greatest surprise of Nigerians, it is always media hype and shows that have never translated the economy better to lift citizens out of poverty.

Nevertheless, for the period under review, many Nigerians can never forget in a hurry the following policies; National Economic Empowerment Development Strategy (NEEDs), State Economic Empowerment Development Strategy (SEEDs), Local Government Economic Empowerment Development Strategy (LEEDs), were jealously guarded policies of the Olusegun Obasanjo administration (1999-2007).

However, the Obasanjo dead-on-arrival third-term agenda made a mess of those brilliantly coined policies with massive input from the World Bank experts and others. We would not also fail to mention how this same policy was linked to the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD).

Another is the 7-Points Agenda of Umaru Musa Yar’Adua (2007- 2010), with a deliberate focus on Electricity, the Rule of Law, Health, and Transportation while Agriculture was tailored to reduce food importation.

Similarly, to the above, was the Transformation Agenda of Goodluck Jonathan (2010 -2015), which even produced Transformation Ambassadors across the country and outside the nation. Ushering in a new lexicon called economic diversification and a clear approach toward agro-produce export orientation and cassava bread made famous by the then Dr Akinwumi Adesina minister of agriculture.

Then came the Economy Recovery Growth Plan (ERGPs) of Muhammadu Buhari’s administration (2015- 2023), stepping the policy economics forward with so much funding for agriculture in the name of economic diversification, a whooping N1 trillion went into rice, wheat, cassava and others under the Central Bank of Nigeria’s Anchor Borrowers Schemes. And many other fundings through the National Agricultural Land Development Agency (NALDA).

Today, we are being harassed by the government of President Tinubu left, right, centre, back and front, depending on which side the harassment is coming on you. With his “Renewed Hope Agenda”, and policy directive of making food and water resources as National Security Council sphere of decisions.

Critically, all of the above-mentioned policies are trackable to tackling food inflation or food-related problems being faced in the country. Hence, in the wisdom of the Government, food and agricultural elements are of national security importance.

Whether they understood the import of food inflation in all their policy action is another issue. However, food inflation is scary, dreadful, and dangerous, it reduces the nutritional and vitamins of the poor, denying them the necessary health benefits that are gotten through food consumption.

This now brings us to the recently released August 2023 general inflation of 25.8 per cent by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). As usual, it draws attention to the flipping floppy economic situation. NBS in its Consumer Price Index (CPI) report for the month of August 2023, the NBS’ headline inflation rate increased to 25.80 percent relative to the July 2023 headline inflation rate, which was 24.08 percent.

According to the NBS, it showed a 1.72 percentage point increase when compared to the July 2023 headline inflation rate. On a year-on-year basis, the headline inflation rate was 5.27% points higher compared to the rate recorded in August 2022, which was 20.52%.

However, the sad reality was the damaging figure of food inflation of 29.34% which was more fearful. The NBS noted that food inflation for August rose to 29.34 per cent in August 2023, representing a 2.35 percentage point increase from 26.98 per cent recorded in the previous month, on a year-on-year basis, which was 6.22% points higher compared to the rate recorded in August 2022 (23.12%).

Our fear about this double-digit food inflation has persisted for many years untamed. And we are very sure that this latest figure is linked not just to the distortion of fiscal and monetary policy of today’s Government but also to past ones are to be blamed also. Major food commodities that are daily consumed by Nigerians such as bread, cereals, milk, meat, fish, potatoes, yam, and other tubers, soft drinks, and fruits are not without government policy intervention.

Meanwhile, the rise in food inflation is seen in “wheat flour with a price increase of 43 per cent to N38,000, rice with 91 percent increase to N61,000, palm oil with 55 percent increase to N31,000, sugar with 75 percent to N42,000 and tomatoes with 82 percent increase to N40,000.”

Fundamentally, economists would always attribute demand and supply paradigms as factors that drive inflation, and most especially food price inflation. Consequently, one may not be surprised at the report going by the many years of structural decay and successive government poverty of economic governance, both in fiscal and monetary policy deployment to address the country’s food inflation woes.

For instance, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) promising from its projection that the country’s inflation rate would drop to a single-digit range of 6–9 per cent has failed, using its interest rate currently standing at 18.75% as a monetary measure to fight inflation. However, we acknowledge the relationship between interest rate and inflation, nevertheless, one cannot become a threat to the other, in this case, stiffing the supply of money and credit to businesses. Lack of understanding in this regard messes up the Apex Bank’s strategic policies that cut across multi-sectorial macroeconomics and microeco­nomic variables that are failing to tame inflation.

Another is the poverty of fiscal policy through government spending to address poor infrastructural facilities to aid farming activities across the country with the Federal Government throwing money on cosmetic and ad hoc agricultural projects, leaving out the core needed project in terms of electricity, storage facility, roads and better transport logistics for rural farming communities and others that are at the base station of food supply.

Similarly, fiscal policy failure is the multiple taxation of Government at the federal (9 tax items) and sub-national levels (46 tax items). The entire Government fiscal mandates are all about revenue drive without balancing how this would go back efficiently to tackle inflation. A case in point is the huge operational cost manufacturing sector that is more in the food commodities sub-sector which bears together with taxes and fees being paid.

Lastly is the failure of our national security architecture to arrest the persistent insecurity that is increasingly affecting farming communities and wreaking havoc on the food chain and commodity supply in the country.

The reality of the foregoing cannot be overemphasised with its burden fuelling the food inflation rate. Sadly, despite trillions of naira being spent as an intervention in agriculture, security, and infrastructure amongst others, the increase in the food inflation rate and the surge in prices of bread and cereals, protein foods like fish, meat, egg and beverages as reported by the NBS food price index are unbearable.

Arguably, the centrality of this piece is that the failure of the Government policies to address food inflation in reverse fuels or aggravates it in our country.

What can be done to address food inflation in Nigeria?

Seriously is to remind the Federal and State Governments that poverty of infrastructure is the bane of food inflation in the country. There is also the poor state of our roads, poor storage of food facilities, multiple taxes, and high cost of transportation.

We believe it is appropriate that the Government across boards gets involved directly in collaboration to tackle food inflation headlong.

This can help us drive down negatively the impact of food inflation resulting from disjointed policy direction.

In addition, it is not a bad idea for the Government to put in place a price control board to tackle the menace of middlemen and women taking undue advantages at this time.

On the other hand, we acknowledge the fact that to deal with inflation, the Central Bank Of Nigeria (CBN) must have a grip on the supply of money, and credit must not be let loose. In this way, CBN’s stance in creating new money must be justified through a steady interest rate rise while this must go with a target to boost investment and employment generation.

For us, CBN using interest rates to fight inflation tends not to be working, rather it devastates the poor. Poignantly, it will be a great service if the CBN focuses on curing inflation that tends to foster economic inequality and divide our society.

Ours also is for a monetary policy that prioritises the prevention of inflation with decisive action to remove more Nigerians from poverty and hunger.

Another is a moderation breaker from the central bank tightening its monetary stance. Although the last Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) for 2023 retains the 18.75% interest rate and projections of over 3% economic growth for the country.

We are expecting a paradigm shift from Dr Olayemi Cardoso, to lead CBN MPC and its brand new four deputy governors. To put out strong measures to reduce unabating FX pressure on the naira in the currency market is enormous because FX market unification has brought problems, with the I&E Window creating its currency round trippling and speculators.

Our take is that whatever measures to stop every factor responsible for eroding the purchasing power of Nigerians and the naira is welcome.

Given we all agree that the fear of farmers returning to the farmlands due to clashes with the herders in the Northern Region, as well as in some Southern parts of the country demands stronger security action against farmers-herders conflict and banditry phenomenon affecting farm produce segment across rural and urban food supply chain. We should not forget how misappropriation of funds and corruption wreaks havoc as well.

Ultimately, we need to reason around the ugly role of unscrupulous individuals’ proclivity in food inflation. Consequently, it is time for the Nigerian Government to fight inflation with a tripod of monetary, fiscal and trade policies in collaboration with the sub-national government.

By Adefolarin A. Olamilekan

Olamilekan is a Political Economist

Email: adefolarin77@gmail.com Tel.: 08073814436

 

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