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Coronation Merchant Bank says Nigeria’s inflation rate to rise to 22.2% year-on-year

Nigeria's inflation rate to rise to 22.2% year-on-year

Chinwe Egwim, Chief Economist, Coronation Merchant Bank

Coronation Merchant Bank has forecast a year-on-year increase in Nigeria’s inflation rate to 22.2% ahead of the release of the National Bureau of Statistics’ August inflation report.

Ms Chinwe Egwim, the bank’s chief economist, stated this on Wednesday during a panel discussion at the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria’s (CIBN) 15th Annual Banking and Finance Conference in Abuja.

The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), stated that  Nigeria’s headline inflation rate increased to 19.64% on a year-on-year basis in July. This means that in the month of July 2022 the general price level was 2.26% higher than in July 2021. On a month-on-month basis, the headline inflation rate in July 2022 was 1.817%, which was 0.001% higher than the rate recorded in June 2022 (1.816 %).

What Coronation Merchant Bank is saying 

Egwim said, “Now, from our vantage point at Coronation, looking ahead in Nigeria, we expect further upticks in headline inflation. Our end-year forecast has inflation hitting 22.2 per cent on a year-on-year.”

“This projection took into consideration modest increases in the month-on-month inflation. Our forecast is also influenced by structural issues impacting the cost of doing business such as insecurity and the impact of the Russia-Ukraine crisis on the economy.

She also stated that the naira will see a surge in circulation at the end of the year, as this would be the peak of electioneering for the 2023 elections.

According to her, this is likely to cause some level of demand-pull inflation, as opposed to the existing cost-push inflation.

“Based on our model, headline inflation should moderate to about 17.28 per cent in 2023 and then it should maintain a downward trajectory to 11.35 per cent by 2025. “We assume that the ongoing crisis would cease or that a workable solution to supply-side shocks and severe cost push inflation would be implemented, in addition to other assumptions,” she said.

On economic diversification, which includes non-oil exports, Egwim stated that if Nigeria’s non-oil export potential was maximized, a 2% increase in non-oil GDP could be achieved on a quarterly basis.

Other problems, according to Egwim, involved production value chains and the value addition of certain export goods, particularly in the agriculture industry.

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