Muda-Yusuf

Chief Executive Officer, Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), Dr Muda Yusuf has said federal government must address the challenges bedeviling the supply side of the economy as this is imperative to urgently fix production and productivity constraints, stabilize the exchange rate by ensuring liquidity in the forex market, tackle insecurity, and accelerate efforts to ensure domestic refining of fuel.

He made this known in a statement reacting to the July inflation report, which accelerated to 24.08 percent as against 22.79 percent in June.

Yusuf noted that surging inflation has had a devastating effect on citizens’ welfare and the health of small businesses. Headline inflation accelerated to 24.08 percent in July as against 22.79 percent in June, adding:

“Food inflation maintained its upward trajectory, accelerating to 27 percent.

“Evidently, we are yet to see an abatement to the key factors fueling inflation. The inflationary pressures have intensified.”

Factors

He noted that some of the factors affecting inflation are global, others are domestic, adding:

“These factors include the depreciating exchange rate, a spike in energy prices, rising transportation costs, logistics challenges, forex market illiquidity, hike in diesel cost, insecurity in many farming communities, and structural bottlenecks impeding productivity.”

“These are largely supply-side and policy concerns.  But the petrol price increase following the fuel subsidy removal and the sharp depreciation in the exchange rate were dominant factors.”

Consequences

He also noted that mounting inflationary pressures enable the Weakening of purchasing power of citizens as real incomes are eroded thus aggravating poverty incidence and escalating production costs which negatively impacts profitability, adding it also leads to;

“Erosion of shareholder value in many businesses, Weakening of investors’ confidence.”

“Declines in manufacturing capacity utilization as a consequence of weakening sales and erosion of profit margins.”

What FG must do

He added that FG must tackle inflation by addressing the challenges bedevilling the supply side of the economy, adding:

“It is imperative to urgently fix production and productivity constraints, stabilize the exchange rate by ensuring liquidity in the forex market, tackle insecurity, accelerate efforts to ensure domestic refining of petroleum products, and fast-tracking tax and fiscal reforms to curb escalating deficit spending.”

He also noted that for FG to give producers and citizens some relief, the government should tweak the tariff policies by granting concessionary import duty on intermediate products for industrialists, especially those in the food processing segments of the agriculture value chain.

 

Nairametrics