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How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti - Politics - Nairaland

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How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by idtwo: 4:20am On Jun 22, 2021
How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger
~ Tosin Adeoti[b][/b]

A few days back a Facebook friend shared an experience (1) whose variations I am hearing more and more these days: While in a local bukka, a young schoolboy of about 14 accosted him. It was in the evening and the boy pleaded with him to buy him food. The lad explained that he had not put anything in his mouth since the dawn of that day. Even though he is someone who pays no mind to random folks requesting for funds, it did jolt him that the boy wasn't asking for money but food. In fact, the boy wasn't asking him for a full meal, only that he gives him the leftover from what he was eating. Moved with compassion, he bought him a meal. As he looked at the boy lapping up his soup, he realized that sometimes the reward of the giver is in the joyful face of the receiver.

Things are hard in this country.

Another friend summed it up in the usual humorous way Nigerians couch their hardship (2),

"Earlier today, I saw my neighbor offloading more than 4 bunches of plantain from his truck. I mean, I won't be surprised if EFCC and DSS trailed him because where una dey see this money!!"

Things are hard in this country.

Many times I am tempted to ask low-level workers how they are surviving the hike in food prices. A few times I asked, I got an earful. Sometimes I part with a few coins but in my heart, I know what I have given can only buy so much in the market and that they will be back to square one in a few days. It is not sustainable.

THIS GALLOPING FOOD INFLATION
The Tribune newspaper ran a piece this month about the hyperinflation in the prices of food items and household products across the country (3). They reported that a measure of pepper that would sell for N1,000 about three weeks back, now sells for N3,000. A big tuber of yam which sold for N1,200 weeks back, now sells for N2,500. Personally, I was shocked that a crate of egg my family used to buy for N600 now sells for N1,600.

The food inflation is so dire that with a food inflation of 22.28% (4), Nigeria has the 11th highest food inflation rate among 169 counties in the world (5), and the 5th in Africa. An NBS survey conducted in 2020 showed that 58% of Nigerians reduced their food consumption between July and December 2020 (6). I imagine it's worse now.

I mentioned that I was shocked when I found out that my beloved egg has jumped 169% in 4 years. Perhaps I should not have been. Those who regularly follow my economic commentary online would be surprised to read that I was shocked. This I had predicted a while back.

HOW DID WE GET HERE?
To get at the heart of a problem it is important for the right questions to be asked. According to the World Bank (2019), the GDP per capita of Nigeria is $2,230 while that of Pakistan is $1,284 (8 ). Going by these figures, an average Nigerian is 70% richer than a Pakistani.

Don't switch off yet. Stay with me a while, please.

I could have chosen any country but I chose Pakistan because of the similarity in population. Depending on where you look and how believable you find the figures (9), Nigeria's population is estimated at 210 million while Pakistan's is estimated at 212 million; 2 million people more populated than Nigeria. So compared to other countries, it's about the closest.

Now, if you go to the World Poverty Clock (10) and check out the number of people in poverty in both countries you will be in for some surprises. Nigeria has 86 million people in extreme poverty but Pakistan has 10 million people. Pakistan has 5% of its people living below $1.9 per day while Nigeria has 41%.

Look at the two data points - GDP per capital snd extreme poverty population - and what do you come up with? One talks about income - Nigerians earn more than Pakistanis - the other talks about cost - Pakistanis have a much better purchasing power. It simply means that $1.9 will buy more things in Pakistan than in Nigeria.

Nigerians are poor not primarily because they are not earning enough but because what they earn is buying less and less compared to people in other countries. When you hear that Nigeria has the most people in extreme poverty in the world (11), it's because their earning power is reduced. If in 2015 you were earning N100k and you were in the habit of buying a big tuber of yam at N500, that's 0.5% of your salary. Now that it's N2500, if your salary stayed the same, you would need to spend 2.5% of your income to buy the same yam. Remembering that unemployment rate has jumped from 10% in 2015 to 33% in 2021 brings it further home, meaning that some who were earning 100k actually have no income right now. Looking at the former scenario, it's either you part with more of your salary for less of yam, buy less yam with the same money, or look for an alternative.

A 2016 World Economic Forum article quoted a USDA survey saying that Nigerians spend the most on food (12). While the percentage of household income spent on food in Singapore is 6.7%, 9.6% in Ireland, 9.9% in Austria, 19% in South Africa, as at 2016 Nigerians spent 56% of their income on food - again, the highest in the world. On the other end, Pakistan has its people spending 41% of their income on food (13).

Is it becoming clearer where our demons are coming from? Food prices is one of the major reasons why Nigeria with a higher GDP per capita than Pakistan has more than 8 times the number of people in poverty.

Now, put on your thinking cap: Faced with this data, as a policy maker in Nigeria, if asked what to do to lift Nigerians out of poverty, what would be one of the first things on your mind? Good! Reducing the percentage of household income Nigerians spend on food. Creating jobs for Nigerians is praiseworthy. Increasing the income of Nigerians is good. However, if the price of food items keeps increasing then their income will be worth less and less. To buy a tuber of yam with the same 0.5% of his salary, the person earning 100k in 2015 would need to be earning 250k today. This is a core issue that should keep government officials awake at night.

No matter what you do, you must never do things that will increase the already high food prices because it means that more and more people will be thrown into the poverty bracket.

WHAT ARE THE PRACTICAL SOLUTIONS?
Once you start from this point that food is absolutely essential to curing hunger and reducing poverty in the country, you will realize the folly of the many policies that has become a given in our country. I will list out a few:

• Banning food items
No month passes by without Nigeria banning or threatening to ban the importation of certain food items. In a piece I wrote a while back titled We Don't Have a Rice Problem (14), I laid out my argument regarding why the government's obsession with rice is misguided. Banning of food items may well be a good policy in certain circumstances but even for those situations a country has to ensure that it has put in place adequate measures to prevent the suffering of its people. If Nigeria consumes, according to PwC (15), 6.9 million tons of rice, you cannot blanket ban importation when production capacity is only 3.7 million tons. If we will ban, the right environment to close the supply gap has to be put in place. Thrive Agric (16) reports that rice production is hampered by both production (low mechanization) and socioeconomic (lack of access to inputs) constraints making it difficult for the gap to be bridged.

This is evidenced by the price of the commodity. A 50kg bag of milled rice which sold around N10,000 in 2015 now sells for N23,000 on the average, according to a BusinessDay report (17). In fact, there are reports that foreign rice is being bagged as local brands (18). It's deception galore.

• Full Border reopening
In a November 2019 piece (19), I argued vehemently against the border closure. In it, I predicted that as long as the border remains shut, whether fully or partially, food inflation will continue to increase. Someone contacted me after he read the article and asked for advice on what he should do for his personal economy, I asked him to stockpile food items. I am not a soothsayer. I have only through reading realized the implications of certain actions and policies. And I am saying now that unless we revisit these policies the prices of food items will continue to increase. In fact, I na few months time people would wish they bought more at present prices. It’s a simple case of ‘those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat them”.

Strangely, despite the evidence of poverty around us, the government is yet to fully open the borders. It's gotten to such a head that only five days ago, the World Bank again advocated (20) that Nigeria fully reopen its land borders to trade so as to help slow Nigeria’s accelerating inflation rate.

In Closing...
There are other solutions to the problem of food hunger including resolving the grave insecurity in the land and good management of the exchange rate, and this has to be done alongside things like facilitating imports of staple foods and medicine by removing them from the list of FX restrictions.

On June 12, when President Buhari announced that his government has lifted 10.5 million people out of poverty (21), many of us know it could not be true based on the realities on ground. Again, referencing the World Poverty Clock, the number of people living in extreme poverty in Nigeria in 2019 was 77.9 million or 39 per cent of the population. By 2020, the number of people living in extreme poverty had jumped to 84.8 million, representing 41% of the population. In other words, at least 7 million Nigerians have been thrown into poverty in the last 12 months alone. And the World Bank confirmed it last Tuesday when it said that the high inflation rate caused by rise in prices of goods and services pushed seven million Nigerians below the poverty line in 2020 (22). Data based on World Data Lab's global poverty model indicates that 4.2 people are currently slipping into poverty every minute in Nigeria.

When one consider that Nigeria has the second highest burden of stunted children in the world, with a national prevalence rate of 32 percent of children under five and that an estimated 2 million children in Nigeria suffer from severe acute malnutrition (SAM) (23), then one wonders why a national emergency has not been called on the food inflation in Nigeria.

For all it's worth, we need to start now. This is not a political issue, food availability is a survival issue.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Lifeisgoody: 4:21am On Jun 22, 2021
These are good facts for consideration.
It's high time Nigeria wake up to modern way of thinking
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Genius100: 4:26am On Jun 22, 2021
The proposed solutions in the article are weak. The practical solution is to remove bottlenecks in agribusiness. Building infrastructure that facilitates quick transportation from the food baskets to other parts of the country is a key solution. Industrialization of agriculture is also a key solution
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Grace001: 4:31am On Jun 22, 2021
This summarize everything about Nigeria economy problem
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Grace001: 4:36am On Jun 22, 2021
Genius100:
The proposed solutions in the article are weak. The practical solution is to remove bottlenecks in agribusiness. Building infrastructure that facilitates quick transportation from the food baskets to other parts of the country is a key solution. Industrialization of agriculture is also a key solution


Buhari and his cabals are busy with cow related issues, he didn’t hunger or food inflation as a threat
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Nobody: 4:42am On Jun 22, 2021
Am afraid with the recent hype on food inflation, the farmers and traders would only take advantage of the hype to increase it further.

Maybe its time to open the land borders... since the exchange currency is not in US dollar, it might not affect our dollar FX rate.
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Nobody: 4:45am On Jun 22, 2021
Genius100:
The proposed solutions in the article are weak. The practical solution is to remove bottlenecks in agribusiness. Building infrastructure that facilitates quick transportation from the food baskets to other parts of the country is a key solution. Industrialization of agriculture is also a key solution

So the solution on opening the land borders that directly gives immediate competition on the food economy and reducing inflation faster alongside increasing employment on same transportation and agribusiness is weak?
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by speaktome(m): 4:52am On Jun 22, 2021
Let them just give us good roads and better power supply and what everything turn around in a jiffy...




But their greedy mind won't allow them to do so....



Things has really fallen apart...




I am among the DOT Men and




#MySignature
#MyBusiness

Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by rexlims(m): 4:54am On Jun 22, 2021
This policies are calculated to further imporverish d masses so that by 2023, people will sell their votes for as little as ₦500 naira.
If history is anything to go buy, this is exactly d same policies d lifeless one adopted in 1983 that nearly crippled this country until IBB overthrew him thru a palace coup.
In Nigeria we forget things easily. When some of us were begging them not to vote him for a second tenure, they called us Wailers. Now everyone is feeling d heat.
Only God knows how many persons will be alive by 2023.
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by meetme01: 4:55am On Jun 22, 2021
Genius100:
The proposed solutions in the article are weak. The practical solution is to remove bottlenecks in agribusiness. Building infrastructure that facilitates quick transportation from the food baskets to other parts of the country is a key solution. Industrialization of agriculture is also a key solution

You and I know that political will has never been shown on agriculture in last 30years.

My anology on how to boom agriculture

We have Federal Universities of Agriculture.

I believe lots of graduate from such institutions have nothing doing in the civil service. Upon graduation, give them an acre of land in their preferred choice .give them access to at least 5M loan with their certificate and a 7yrs bond not to travel out of the country for greener pastures even after the loan has been paid. It will provide jobs to the locals, NYSC Agric grads & IT students will have easy placement .

They all have different area of specialisation. Before we know, all staples will be abundant in the market. The only infrastructure needed is a storage of excess for future purposes. But the government has never been sincere. They give agriculture loans to politicians and their cohorts who know nothing about agriculture.

It is not rocket science. It is just the political will to do the right thing.

Your view is another idea to boom agriculture. Lots of such around but our old motor just believe in looting without anything to show for it. It sucks.
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by ford101: 5:16am On Jun 22, 2021
Buhari is using Nigeria money to support Niger Republic
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by houseontherock: 5:31am On Jun 22, 2021
You closed the border when you have nothing within
You wasted money forcing your people to plant rice that can't sustain the nation
Your brothers ensure their cows eat whatever they see in our farms
You arm the others to ensure that the South don't grow food, leaving healthy soil to waste
Yet, southern borders remain closed because you expect to wage war with starving the South.
Your land in the North is not fertile at all, you can only grow food with poisonous fertilizers that's killing the people little by little including the zombies!

1 Like

Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Monogamy: 5:34am On Jun 22, 2021
They are too docile.. There are lots of things we are yet to be producing in the country..
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by sweetonugbu: 5:35am On Jun 22, 2021
I am afraid for this country
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by sweetonugbu: 5:37am On Jun 22, 2021
meetme01:


You and I know that political will has never been shown on agriculture in last 30years.

My anology on how to boom agriculture

We have Federal Universities of Agriculture.

I believe lots of graduate from such institutions have nothing doing in the civil service. Upon graduation, give them an acre of land in their preferred choice .give them access to at least 5M loan with their certificate and a 7yrs bond not to travel out of the country for greener pastures even after the loan has been paid. It will provide jobs to the locals, NYSC Agric grads & IT students will have easy placement .

They all have different area of specialisation. Before we know, all staples will be abundant in the market. The only infrastructure needed is a storage of excess for future purposes. But the government has never been sincere. They give agriculture loans to politicians and their cohorts who know nothing about agriculture.

It is not rocket science. It is just the political will to do the right thing.

Your view is another idea to boom agriculture. Lots of such around but our old motor just believe in looting without anything to show for it. It sucks.
nice idea
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Standing5(m): 6:53am On Jun 22, 2021
God I thank you. Provision of food is not a joke. Baba. Thank you.
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by stonemasonn: 9:45am On Jun 22, 2021
2023 is still far..chai!
Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by History555: 10:26am On Jun 22, 2021
Genius100:
The proposed solutions in the article are weak. The practical solution is to remove bottlenecks in agribusiness. Building infrastructure that facilitates quick transportation from the food baskets to other parts of the country is a key solution. Industrialization of agriculture is also a key solution

You are speaking grammer. What are those bottlenecks in agric business that were not in existence when food prices were low. Who told you that food cannot get to any part of nigeria.

1 Like

Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by History555: 10:31am On Jun 22, 2021
The three reasons for food inflation are
1. Fulani herdsmen. Those guys are terrorizing farmers in rural areas with active support of the govt

2. fulani herdsmen. Farming is hard work. Then after all ur hardwork, someone walks in destroys everything. Would you be encouraged to repeat it or seek for alternative means of income. This is wat farmers are facing

3. You hear your farmer friend was hacked to death in his farm. You keep hearing about farmers been hacked and farms been destroyed. Of course you will abandon farming and take to okada riding

1 Like

Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by blackmantis: 11:30am On Jun 22, 2021
Had a similar experience last year when traveling to Katsina from Abuja. We stopped just before Jaji to have lunch and as we were eating some almajiris started gathering. I was uneasy and stopped eating as I paid for the food and got up the almajiri's rushed the leftover to my greatest surprise. Even when others finished eating they carried their plates and licked the scraps. Just seeing that made me sick physically.

I cant describe the level of poverty I saw in the far north.

3 Likes

Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by Konquest: 12:32pm On Feb 10
idtwo:
How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger
~ Tosin Adeoti


A few days back a Facebook friend shared an experience (1) whose variations I am hearing more and more these days: While in a local bukka, a young schoolboy of about 14 accosted him. It was in the evening and the boy pleaded with him to buy him food. The lad explained that he had not put anything in his mouth since the dawn of that day. Even though he is someone who pays no mind to random folks requesting for funds, it did jolt him that the boy wasn't asking for money but food. In fact, the boy wasn't asking him for a full meal, only that he gives him the leftover from what he was eating. Moved with compassion, he bought him a meal. As he looked at the boy lapping up his soup, he realized that sometimes the reward of the giver is in the joyful face of the receiver.

Things are hard in this country.

Another friend summed it up in the usual humorous way Nigerians couch their hardship (2),

"Earlier today, I saw my neighbor offloading more than 4 bunches of plantain from his truck. I mean, I won't be surprised if EFCC and DSS trailed him because where una dey see this money!!"

Things are hard in this country.

Many times I am tempted to ask low-level workers how they are surviving the hike in food prices. A few times I asked, I got an earful. Sometimes I part with a few coins but in my heart, I know what I have given can only buy so much in the market and that they will be back to square one in a few days. It is not sustainable.

THIS GALLOPING FOOD INFLATION
The Tribune newspaper ran a piece this month about the hyperinflation in the prices of food items and household products across the country (3). They reported that a measure of pepper that would sell for N1,000 about three weeks back, now sells for N3,000. A big tuber of yam which sold for N1,200 weeks back, now sells for N2,500. Personally, I was shocked that a crate of egg my family used to buy for N600 now sells for N1,600.

The food inflation is so dire that with a food inflation of 22.28% (4), Nigeria has the 11th highest food inflation rate among 169 counties in the world (5), and the 5th in Africa. An NBS survey conducted in 2020 showed that 58% of Nigerians reduced their food consumption between July and December 2020 (6). I imagine it's worse now.

I mentioned that I was shocked when I found out that my beloved egg has jumped 169% in 4 years. Perhaps I should not have been. Those who regularly follow my economic commentary online would be surprised to read that I was shocked. This I had predicted a while back.

HOW DID WE GET HERE?
To get at the heart of a problem it is important for the right questions to be asked. According to the World Bank (2019), the GDP per capita of Nigeria is $2,230 while that of Pakistan is $1,284 (8 ). Going by these figures, an average Nigerian is 70% richer than a Pakistani.

Don't switch off yet. Stay with me a while, please.

I could have chosen any country but I chose Pakistan because of the similarity in population. Depending on where you look and how believable you find the figures (9), Nigeria's population is estimated at 210 million while Pakistan's is estimated at 212 million; 2 million people more populated than Nigeria. So compared to other countries, it's about the closest.

Now, if you go to the World Poverty Clock (10) and check out the number of people in poverty in both countries you will be in for some surprises. Nigeria has 86 million people in extreme poverty but Pakistan has 10 million people. Pakistan has 5% of its people living below $1.9 per day while Nigeria has 41%.

Look at the two data points - GDP per capital snd extreme poverty population - and what do you come up with? One talks about income - Nigerians earn more than Pakistanis - the other talks about cost - Pakistanis have a much better purchasing power. It simply means that $1.9 will buy more things in Pakistan than in Nigeria.

Nigerians are poor not primarily because they are not earning enough but because what they earn is buying less and less compared to people in other countries. When you hear that Nigeria has the most people in extreme poverty in the world (11), it's because their earning power is reduced. If in 2015 you were earning N100k and you were in the habit of buying a big tuber of yam at N500, that's 0.5% of your salary. Now that it's N2500, if your salary stayed the same, you would need to spend 2.5% of your income to buy the same yam. Remembering that unemployment rate has jumped from 10% in 2015 to 33% in 2021 brings it further home, meaning that some who were earning 100k actually have no income right now. Looking at the former scenario, it's either you part with more of your salary for less of yam, buy less yam with the same money, or look for an alternative.

A 2016 World Economic Forum article quoted a USDA survey saying that Nigerians spend the most on food (12). While the percentage of household income spent on food in Singapore is 6.7%, 9.6% in Ireland, 9.9% in Austria, 19% in South Africa, as at 2016 Nigerians spent 56% of their income on food - again, the highest in the world. On the other end, Pakistan has its people spending 41% of their income on food (13).

Is it becoming clearer where our demons are coming from? Food prices is one of the major reasons why Nigeria with a higher GDP per capita than Pakistan has more than 8 times the number of people in poverty.

Now, put on your thinking cap: Faced with this data, as a policy maker in Nigeria, if asked what to do to lift Nigerians out of poverty, what would be one of the first things on your mind? Good! Reducing the percentage of household income Nigerians spend on food. Creating jobs for Nigerians is praiseworthy. Increasing the income of Nigerians is good. However, if the price of food items keeps increasing then their income will be worth less and less. To buy a tuber of yam with the same 0.5% of his salary, the person earning 100k in 2015 would need to be earning 250k today. This is a core issue that should keep government officials awake at night.

No matter what you do, you must never do things that will increase the already high food prices because it means that more and more people will be thrown into the poverty bracket.

WHAT ARE THE PRACTICAL SOLUTIONS?
Once you start from this point that food is absolutely essential to curing hunger and reducing poverty in the country, you will realize the folly of the many policies that has become a given in our country. I will list out a few:

• Banning food items
No month passes by without Nigeria banning or threatening to ban the importation of certain food items. In a piece I wrote a while back titled We Don't Have a Rice Problem (14), I laid out my argument regarding why the government's obsession with rice is misguided. Banning of food items may well be a good policy in certain circumstances but even for those situations a country has to ensure that it has put in place adequate measures to prevent the suffering of its people. If Nigeria consumes, according to PwC (15), 6.9 million tons of rice, you cannot blanket ban importation when production capacity is only 3.7 million tons. If we will ban, the right environment to close the supply gap has to be put in place. Thrive Agric (16) reports that rice production is hampered by both production (low mechanization) and socioeconomic (lack of access to inputs) constraints making it difficult for the gap to be bridged.

This is evidenced by the price of the commodity. A 50kg bag of milled rice which sold around N10,000 in 2015 now sells for N23,000 on the average, according to a BusinessDay report (17). In fact, there are reports that foreign rice is being bagged as local brands (18). It's deception galore.

• Full Border reopening
In a November 2019 piece (19), I argued vehemently against the border closure. In it, I predicted that as long as the border remains shut, whether fully or partially, food inflation will continue to increase. Someone contacted me after he read the article and asked for advice on what he should do for his personal economy, I asked him to stockpile food items. I am not a soothsayer. I have only through reading realized the implications of certain actions and policies. And I am saying now that unless we revisit these policies the prices of food items will continue to increase. In fact, I na few months time people would wish they bought more at present prices. It’s a simple case of ‘those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat them”.

Strangely, despite the evidence of poverty around us, the government is yet to fully open the borders. It's gotten to such a head that only five days ago, the World Bank again advocated (20) that Nigeria fully reopen its land borders to trade so as to help slow Nigeria’s accelerating inflation rate.

In Closing...
There are other solutions to the problem of food hunger including resolving the grave insecurity in the land and good management of the exchange rate, and this has to be done alongside things like facilitating imports of staple foods and medicine by removing them from the list of FX restrictions.

On June 12, when President Buhari announced that his government has lifted 10.5 million people out of poverty (21), many of us know it could not be true based on the realities on ground. Again, referencing the World Poverty Clock, the number of people living in extreme poverty in Nigeria in 2019 was 77.9 million or 39 per cent of the population. By 2020, the number of people living in extreme poverty had jumped to 84.8 million, representing 41% of the population. In other words, at least 7 million Nigerians have been thrown into poverty in the last 12 months alone. And the World Bank confirmed it last Tuesday when it said that the high inflation rate caused by rise in prices of goods and services pushed seven million Nigerians below the poverty line in 2020 (22). Data based on World Data Lab's global poverty model indicates that 4.2 people are currently slipping into poverty every minute in Nigeria.

When one consider that Nigeria has the second highest burden of stunted children in the world, with a national prevalence rate of 32 percent of children under five and that an estimated 2 million children in Nigeria suffer from severe acute malnutrition (SAM) (23), then one wonders why a national emergency has not been called on the food inflation in Nigeria.

For all it's worth, we need to start now. This is not a political issue, food availability is a survival issue.
Bump... Deep insights.

~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~
"A 2016 World Economic Forum article quoted a USDA survey saying that Nigerians spend the most on food (12). While the percentage of household income spent on food in Singapore is 6.7%, 9.6% in Ireland, 9.9% in Austria, 19% in South Africa, as at 2016 Nigerians spent 56% of their income on food - again, the highest in the world. On the other end, Pakistan has its people spending 41% of their income on food (13).

Is it becoming clearer where our demons are coming from? Food prices is one of the major reasons why Nigeria with a higher GDP per capita than Pakistan has more than 8 times the number of people in poverty.

Now, put on your thinking cap: Faced with this data, as a policy maker in Nigeria, if asked what to do to lift Nigerians out of poverty, what would be one of the first things on your mind? Good! Reducing the percentage of household income Nigerians spend on food. Creating jobs for Nigerians is praiseworthy. Increasing the income of Nigerians is good. However, if the price of food items keeps increasing then their income will be worth less and less. To buy a tuber of yam with the same 0.5% of his salary, the person earning 100k in 2015 would need to be earning 250k today. This is a core issue that should keep government officials awake at night."

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Re: How Nigeria Manufactures Hunger ~ Tosin Adeoti by proeast(m): 12:56pm On Feb 10
Facts!!!

What I find disturbing is that the writer was complaining bitterly that rice jumped from 10,000 to 23,000 and argued that Nigerians were facing terribly hard times. Now what would he say today? I just bought same 50kg of Gilaso rice at 68,000!!!!

This country is going down the abyss and it will collapse completely if nothing urgent is done.

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