Inflation rate to close 2023 at 30.5%, says EIU
Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has disclosed that Nigeria’s inflation rate to close 2023 at 30.5 per cent owing to a delayed and insufficient monetary response coupled with fiscal expansionism.
EIU in a latest report on Nigeria said the inflation has continued to rise throughout 2023, and the pace has quickened since June owing to market reforms, which are likely to have powerful second-round pass-through effects.
According to EIU report, “Currency losses on the parallel market, where a sizable share of foreign exchange is transacted, will be a major driver of imported inflation into 2024.
“From an estimated rate of 30.5per cent at end-2023, inflation will stay high in 2024, at 23.6per cent on average for the year, owing to a delayed and insufficient monetary response coupled with fiscal expansionism.
“The decline assumes that petrol prices will be held steady over much of the year. In latter years an undercurrent of softer global commodity prices should foster a continued disinflationary trend until 2028, although in no year will inflation fall within the 7-9 per cent target range.
“Factors behind this include insecurity, a large devaluation in 2025, the need to deliver cost-reflective electricity tariffs and the CBN’s dovishness. We expect inflation to average 13.2 per cent in 2025-28.”
EIU predicted 2.2 per cent real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for Nigeria by end of 2023 and 2.6 per cent by 2024.
Nigeria’s third quarter (Q3) 2023 GDP rose by 2.5per cent, below the 3.5per cent growth in 2022, according to National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
EIU said, “We expect real GDP growth to pick up from an estimate of just 2.2per cent in 2023, but to remain sluggish in 2024, at 2.6per cent.
“Performance will be dragged down by high inflation and monetary tightening, causing domestic demand to contract for a third year running in 2024.”
The report noted that, “In a country where the population expands at about 2.5per cent a year, this marks an unusual stretch of decline. Net exports will be the sole growth driver early in the forecast period. We expect oil export volumes to increase as security in the Niger Delta allows higher oil output; the balance will be complemented by the displacement of fuel and chemical imports in 2024 as the Dangote refinery ramps up production.
“As inflation falls and monetary policy becomes expansionary from 2025, domestic demand will return to (low) growth. Consequently, real GDP growth will rise to four per cent in 2025—the highest rate since 2014, owing partly to rebound effects—and average 3.2 per cent in 202628, with the PIA and recent deregulation of the power sector expected to support investment over the medium to long term.”