Search

Nigeria inflation slows to 20.12% in August, fuelling rate cut hopes

Youths in Nigeria protest against brutalities Photo by Ayoola Salako @ Unsplash
Youths in Nigeria protest against brutalities Photo by Ayoola Salako @ Unsplash
  • Annual inflation falls for fifth straight month as naira strengthens
  • Central bank faces pressure to cut record-high 27.5% benchmark rate

 

ABUJA, NIGERIA – Nigeria’s annual inflation slowed for the fifth straight month in August to 20.12%, down from 21.88% in July, driven by a stronger naira and easing energy costs, official data showed.

Core inflation eased to 20.33% from 21.33%, while food inflation inched up to 21.87% from 21.74%. Month-on-month, prices rose 0.74%, compared with 3.12% in July, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

Analysts noted that the figures also reflect base effects after the statistics agency reset its inflation calculations in February, using 2024 as its new base year.

Pressure on the central bank

The slowdown could open the door for Nigeria’s Central Bank to cut its benchmark interest rate – held at a record 27.5% since November 2024 after aggressive tightening to curb runaway prices. The Monetary Policy Committee is due to meet September 23.

Yet persistent food inflation remains a concern. Governor Olayemi Cardoso has repeatedly warned about insecurity in Nigeria’s farming belt, where violent clashes between herders and farmers, coupled with jihadist attacks in the northeast and northwest, continue to disrupt food supply chains.

Inflation peaked at 34.6% last year following President Bola Tinubu’s reforms, which scrapped fuel subsidies and sharply devalued the naira. Since then, the currency has gained more than 15% against the dollar, while fuel prices have stabilised amid competition between the new Dangote Refinery and private importers.

The IMF projects inflation will ease to 18% by 2026, while Tinubu has forecast a sharper drop to 15% by year-end under his 2025 budget. Analysts say September’s meeting could mark the first rate cut since Tinubu took office in 2023.

Recent Business

Bustling street scene in Fes Medina, Morocco. Photo by Abderrahmane Habibi @ Pexels
Morocco’s inflation rebound: why energy shocks are reshaping a fragile price recovery
Read More »
GoldBod CEO Sammy Gyamfi (far right) and others inspect the first batch of locally refined gold at the Gold Coast Refinery. Photo by GoldBod
How Ghana’s GoldBod turned a $487mn surplus into a blueprint for reclaiming Africa’s gold wealth
Read More »
Abiy Ahmed Ali, Prime Minister of Ethiopia. Photo @Abiy Ahmed Ali/X
Why Africa’s AI future now runs through Ethiopia and what Abiy Ahmed’s new AU role means
Read More »

Recent Politics

Nigerian youth on the street. Photo by Salem Ochidi @ Unsplash
Treason case lays bare Nigeria’s hidden power struggles under Tinubu
Read More »
Benin Finance Minister Romuald Wadagni. Photo @Romuald Wadagni/Facebook
Benin election 2026: From fiscal discipline to political delivery - Wadagni’s real test begins
Read More »
Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. Photo by Johnnathan Tshibangu @ Unsplash
Why DR Congo is taking in US deportees — and what Africa gains or risks
Read More »

Latest Posts

Latest news insights