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Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Islie: 7:46am On Jul 13, 2021
UN: Almost one in three globally go hungry during a pandemic

• We earn as low as N900 daily, say factory workers

The capacity of many households to purchase daily and essential needs are becoming tougher, going by the erosion in the value of incomes due to high inflation and stagnated earnings, especially among low and middle-income earners. This development is forcing many to depend on loans, families and friends for sustenance.

With about 50 per cent rise in the inflation rate from 9.01 per cent when the Buhari administration took over in 2015 to 17.93 per cent recorded in May 2021, compared with a 40 per cent rise in the minimum wage from N18,000 in 2015 to N30,000, which many states are finding difficult to pay, many Nigerians today are struggling with hunger.

They lamented that their monthly take-home pay could no longer take them home considering the high cost of commodities in the country. Presently, many Nigerians with limited access to loans, due to lack of collateral are becoming dependent on the fast-growing collateral-free digital lending or loan apps to access emergency funds and cater for personal expenses within a short period.

However, a requisite to accessing loans via these platforms come with the provision of personal information such as BVN, house address, and debit card details including its PIN. Most often, the loan apps, if granted permission, have access to the applicant’s phone contacts and other sensitive information on the applicant’s mobile device.

Consequent to fulfilling the requirements, one is only able to request an instant loan ranging from as low as N2,000 and as high as N500,000 within minutes depending on the financial capacity of the company, interest rate and applicant’s creditworthiness calculated by the company.

With defaults on the rise, it is becoming common practice for contacts of the loan beneficiary to receive terse messages from such firms reporting cases of defaults.

MEANWHILE, the number of people who did not have enough food to eat rose steeply during the pandemic to include almost a third of the world, according to a new United Nations (UN) report published yesterday. Five UN agencies said the number of people without access to healthy diets grew by 320 million last year to nearly 2.37 billion people– more than the increases in the previous five years combined. The number of people who went hungry grew by about 161 million last year to 811 million.

The report by five UN agencies – the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organisation (WHO) – said the effects of the pandemic on nutrition were still being counted, but levels of impaired growth and development among children are expected to increase because of the pandemic. An estimated 22 per cent of children under five are considered to be stunted.

Gilbert Houngbo, President of IFAD, said enough food was being produced to feed everyone and the crisis was a failure in the food system. “It is clear that, unfortunately, the pandemic continues to expose weaknesses in our food system, which threaten the lives and livelihoods of people around the world, particularly the most vulnerable and those living in countries affected by conflict, climate change and inequality,” he said.

Houngbo said that even when enough food was produced, crises such as the pandemic could affect regional and international trade, which is especially damaging for countries reliant on imports.

ACCORDING to the Nigerian Living Standards Survey (NLSS) report by the NBS in 2020, the number of Nigerians that are poor have been estimated to be 82.9 million, meaning 40.1 per cent of Nigerians are classified as poor by national standards.

The NLSS report also recorded a poverty line of N137,430 for each person per year, translating to an average of N376 per day. The situation is worse considering that more Nigerians now live on less than one dollar a day, which translates to about N500 per day.

In its COVID-19 National Longitudinal Phone Survey (NLPS) for January 2021, the NBS reported that when households were asked to indicate their income sources between August 2020 and January 2021, and how the income they received from each applicable source compared to the same period a year ago (August 2019 to January 2020), 38 per cent of the households reported income loss (decrease).

Looking across different income sources, income losses were most widespread for remittances from family members within the country (46 per cent of households that had such income); followed by assistance from non-relatives within the country (42 per cent) and non-farm family business (41 per cent).

Though the minimum wage was adjusted to N30,000, many governors have failed to meet the obligation, while those in the private sector have not had it better, as incomes were revised lower due to the impact of the pandemic on many businesses.
Currently, many Nigerians are underemployed and unemployed, thus raising concerns about the country’s rising dependency ratio, as the situation has further mounted pressure on disposable incomes.


A comparison of the prices of some foodstuffs between 2015 and 2021 showed that a bag of rice (foreign) was N10,500, but now N30,000, while a bag of local rice that was N6,000, now sells for N22,000.

A basin of garri in 2015 was N3,000, but now N11,000; cup of beans in 2015 was N30 now N120; an average tuber of yam in 2015 was N200 now N1,000; sizeable frozen fish in 2015 was N100, now N800. Across the board, the prices of foodstuffs in this present administration have drastically increased.

For instance, a worker, whose monthly income was N50,000 in 2015 could comfortably purchase some commodities and still have little savings, but the reverse is the reality presently, especially now with dwindling incomes. At between N18,000 and N30,000, many workers can barely spend on feeding, transportation, energy consumption, and other amenities, with little savings.

The Guardian findings showed that most employers have not done salary appraisals for many years, while some are not ready or willing to increase salaries any time soon, despite quantum efforts put in by the employees to keep the organisations running at optimal capacity.

Those who spoke with The Guardian noted that they have not had it good since the past five years when this administration came on board, expressing regrets that the change mantra promised by Muhammadu Buhari during his campaign period is not commensurate with current realities. They argued that with the rise in inflation and even devaluation of the Naira, their salaries could no longer sustain them.

For instance, Nigeria’s inflation rate since 2013 to date had grown from 8.48 per cent to 17.93 per cent in May 2021. In 2013, the inflation rate stood at 8.48 per cent while it dropped to 8.06 per cent 2014. In 2015, when this administration took over, it shot up to 9.01 per cent with a yearly change of 0.95 per cent and had continued to rise exponentially.

Giving a breakdown, in 2016, inflation rate rose sporadically to 15.68 per cent with about a 6.67 per cent increase from 2015. In 2017, it stood at 16.52 per cent with about a 0.85 per cent increase from 2016, while in 2018, the inflation rate significantly dropped to 12.09 per cent with about -4.43 per cent from 2017.

In 2019, it stood at 11.40 per cent with a yearly change of -0.70 per cent when compared to 2018, while in 2020 and 2021 as at May, the inflation rate stood at 13.2 per cent and 17.93 per cent respectively, which analysts believed may drop to an average of 17.0 per cent in 2021, with increases on both core and non-core levels over 2020.

Using the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Inter-bank Foreign Exchange Market (IFEM), $1 as of June 2021 was about N404.19 but in June 2015, $1 was equivalent to N196.92.

Comparing the rate than at N196.92 and N404.19 to $1 now, with a minimum wage of N18,000 and N30,000, respectively, showed that Nigerian workers are at the receiving end, with low purchasing power and high cost of commodities.

A worker, who works in the factory department of one of the manufacturing firms in Lagos told The Guardian that their monthly take-home is not up to the minimum wage. The worker, who craved anonymity for fear of being sacked said they receive daily pay of N1,400 for a 12-hourly job, running from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., which when summed up monthly stands at N28,000. On the job, he said they run two shifts, where many youths rushed in large numbers to be among those that would be selected for the day’s job.

Another female factory worker and a graduate, Nkechi Obi, from another organisation, said she earns N900 daily for a six-hour shift. She said due to the low wage, most of them are forced to work two shifts intermittently to make more money to meet up with family needs.

She said: “I am a graduate of Business Administration from one of the federal universities. I have not been able to get a good job offer since I graduated in 2019. I had to take the factory job to meet up with some financial needs. The work has not been easy because most of the time, I engage in two shifts as the wage is so poor and nothing to write home about. I pray I get a better offer because the factory job is already taking a huge toll on me.”

The Guardian investigation also showed that many private schools are underpaying their workers below the minimum wage. Already, the N30,000 minimum wage is supposed to be for Grade Level 1 Step 1 workers, which is meant for the unskilled workers like cleaners or gatekeepers, but such are paid to graduates and some with second degrees, where a Master’s degree worker earns about N25,000 as salary.

Not left out too are the banking sector and other financial institutions, where the majority of the personnel operate as casual workers. The workers are denied good pay, pension, gratuity and other allowances.

The United Nations (UN) reviewed the poverty line from $1.25 per day to $1.90 per day, and this is worsened by the rising cost of living and declining purchasing power in Nigeria. Standard of living, according to experts, is the quality of life being lived by a particular set of people — their level of wealth, comfort, material good and access to the basic necessities of life.

While living standards, according to the World Bank, are measured by income and expenditure, in Nigeria’s case, real income has dropped over the past 12 months with the massive fall in the value of the Naira and rising unemployment.

Already, the income and consumption of Nigerian households had remained unstable due to the impact of COVID-19. With prices of goods and services taking a flight, the standard of living for Nigerians has evidently dropped with the cost of living far-reaching.

Economists are of the view that the rapid decrease in the domestic value of the currency has put a severe strain on domestic households in 2021 as their real disposable incomes vapourised. They urged that the government needed to stimulate private consumption to encourage growth since the government’s spending has not translated into higher incomes for the average worker and, therefore, average private consumption remains depressed.

A labour expert and President of the Chemical and Non-Metallic Products Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (CANMPSSAN), Segun David, said the socio-economic situation in the country vis-a-vis COVID-19, workers’ welfare and N30,000 national minimum wage amid rising inflation, made some employers, especially during the peak of COVID-19 to do many things that were inimical to the growth of workers.

He said: “For instance, a lot of companies downsized arbitrarily and indiscriminately, while some even went ahead to reduce the salary of workers. Now that things have improved reasonably, those salaries were not reversed.

“Also, we saw where a majority of companies declare huge profits than they usually made in recent past. But most of them to date have not done salary appraisals and yet they are declaring huge profits. These profits, if I may say, part of it was got as a result of suppression of workers, because some of them did not increase salary, some employees were retired and there were no replacements, they froze promotions and in all these, they counted them as profits, not even considering the workers that worked for them to make these profits.”

In all these sufferings, there was an initial plan recently by the Federal Government to slash the salaries of workers in the country, which was immediately kicked against by organised labour. President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Ayuba Wabba, said NLC was shocked at a statement credited to the Minister of Finance, Zainab Ahmed, on the plan to reduce the high cost of governance by cutting down on workers’ salaries.

He described Nigerian workers as miracles strutting on two legs, who are only surviving by hair’s breadth. According to him, it is in public knowledge that the multiple devaluations of the Naira in a short time, and the prevailing high inflation rate in Nigeria, has knocked out the salaries earned by Nigerian workers across the board.

He added: “It is most unthinkable that the government would be contemplating to unilaterally slash the salaries of Nigerian workers at this time. The question to ask is which salary is the government planning to slash? It certainly cannot be the meagre national minimum wage of N30,000, which right now cannot even buy a bag of rice.”

“We urge the government as a social partner to quickly respond to the demands by labour for an upward review of salaries of all Nigerian workers. Nigerian workers demand an increase in their remunerations and allowances.”

President of the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC), Quadri Olaleye, who noted that the Nigerian economy was challenged on many fronts, also said employers could conveniently pay and increase salaries if they could cut down on their ostentatious lifestyles.

Noting that before the N30,000 minimum wage was finally passed into law in 2018, the last time salary was negotiated was in 2011, meaning that for almost eight years there was no wage increase.

Director-General of the Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA), Dr. Timothy Olawale, said the economy currently grappling with the worst economic growth, having experienced two recessions within the last five years in the country’s history, was currently affecting many employers with regards to salary payment capacity. He maintained that unless crucial economic reform and political will are demonstrated, the situation might continue to get worse.

https://m.guardian.ng/news/nigerians-borrow-to-feed-as-food-prices-soar-amid-stagnated-income/

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Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by ChiefSosa(m): 7:48am On Jul 13, 2021
All I know is that I'm not paying back any of buhari's debts. If he can borrow, then he must pay before he leaves or when he leaves. China and other countries should hold buhari's blockus and demand their money.
I have just #580 (I had to buy 2 sachets of pure water while trekking around Nigeria looking for work) with me and I'm not giving anybody my money.
Countries should start putting this sign at their border whenever buhari wants to enter or talk with them.

73 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Dmavin: 7:50am On Jul 13, 2021
I thought they said everyone has gone back to farming recently

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Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Iyiataata92: 7:51am On Jul 13, 2021
The small food wey we for dey manage for farm, Bihari's kinsmen don destroy am finish with cows and AK 47.
And to get money to import from people wey their farm still dey work, Bihari carry hard economy come

46 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nuelito: 7:51am On Jul 13, 2021
The problem wey dey dx kontri big pass zuma rock

1 Like

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nobody: 7:51am On Jul 13, 2021
Right here in kastina na grassniterians we Don become o

Even with our boarders that are thrown wide open for cheap food we still not finding it easy

8 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nobody: 7:52am On Jul 13, 2021
Dmavin:
I thought they said everyone has gone back to farming recently
No be who dey safe for farm go enter farming?

You wan go plant corn, yam, cassava make Fulani terrorists uproot am use am feed cow cum risk your life

44 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by appishani1(m): 7:52am On Jul 13, 2021
even Boko Haram are hungry I swear, am from Adamawa state, and when they visited your town they will start carrying bread rice and foodstuffs. they are in need of food noww

58 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by IgweOfNnewi: 7:53am On Jul 13, 2021
Buhari has destroyed the country completely

28 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nobody: 7:54am On Jul 13, 2021
appishani1:
even Boko Haram are hungry I swear, am from Adamawa state, and when they visited your town they will start carrying bread rice and foodstuffs. they are in need of food noww
But they now have farmers who are under their terroritory that harvests their 60% for them na
Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nbotee(m): 7:55am On Jul 13, 2021
Dats Buhari Economics; hopeless and clueless leadership at it's peak while living in denial... People can't go to the farms for fear of their lives. Those who farmed can't harvest becos of the govt's empowerment for bandits and herdsmen. Taxes and levies and more tariff increases on power and fuel products and more increases imminent all on top of a salary increase they haven't even implemented yet.

9 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nobody: 8:03am On Jul 13, 2021
Nbotee:
Dats Buhari Economics; hopeless and clueless leadership at it's peak while living in denial... People can't go to the farms for fear of their lives. Those who farmed can't harvest becos of the govt's empowerment for bandits and herdsmen. Taxes and levies and more tariff increases on power and fuel products and more increases imminent all on top of a salary increase they haven't even implemented yet.
Buhari Economics has essentially killed the Baking and catering industry consisting of those making bread, biscuits, cake, donuts, etc with just one policy of allowing Fulani terrorists roam free with crime

Today Flour the staple ingredient in this industry can not be accessed because Fulani terrorists won't allow farmers to plant and harvest their cassava, corn in peace

This industry that was once at the very reach of the common man providing jobs and food

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Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Asgard73: 8:09am On Jul 13, 2021
Tinubu Acn and his Yoruba people brought this government to power .. out of greed for presidency..

Nigeria is burning in all sectors.. same Yoruba people are worst hit with hunger and security challenges. .

Today same Yoruba people are diplomatically TUFACE supporting the same evil party.. worst still they wan package same Tinubu and party for President

If this not desperation of an entire tribe led by an ......

Apc never start.. by the time dey finish no be only pictures of Northerner eating grass..

Southwest will get used to it.. aboki Na still humans.
go to dia ghosted cities and see the rush for Akeke bread.. and soaked garri.
They’ve forgotten how they packaged Buhari and Apc .. they now deny this fact

I will keep calling out Yoruba people for putting Nigeria in this mess out of their sophistication..

Na here e land everybody

By December naira go be 1000 per dollar..

Person go the talk some mama thank ma’ wey still the eat from hand to mouth go the mention carelessly

23 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by greatdreamer(m): 8:09am On Jul 13, 2021
Everything about Buhari and his evil party is always on negative indices including Buhari relationship with his wife, Aisha Buhari

6 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by appishani1(m): 8:14am On Jul 13, 2021
Mikecold:
But they now have farmers who are under their terroritory that harvests their 60% for them na
And who told you that? Boko Haram that are relocating almost every month?

1 Like

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nobody: 8:19am On Jul 13, 2021
appishani1:

And who told you that? Boko Haram that are relocating almost every month?
Relocating from north east?
Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Tekzyflex(m): 8:27am On Jul 13, 2021
Nigeria has gone to the waste bins. We are totally screwed.

1 Like

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by byinks(f): 8:35am On Jul 13, 2021
Asgard73:
Tinubu Acn and his Yoruba people brought this government to power .. out of greed for presidency..

Nigeria is burning in all sectors.. same Yoruba people are worst hit with hunger and security challenges. .

Today same Yoruba people are diplomatically TUFACE supporting the same evil party.. worst still they wan package same Tinubu and party for President

If this not desperation of an entire tribe led by an ......

Apc never start.. by the time dey finish no be only pictures of Northerner eating grass..

Southwest will get used to it.. aboki Na still humans.
go to dia ghosted cities and see the rush for Akeke bread.. and soaked garri.
They’ve forgotten how they packaged Buhari and Apc .. they now deny this fact

I will keep calling out Yoruba people for putting Nigeria in this mess out of their sophistication..

Na here e land everybody

By December naira go be 1000 per dollar..

Person go the talk some mama thank ma’ wey still the eat from hand to mouth go the mention carelessly

A whole tribe you said.... ridiculous !

2 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by EKONGKING: 8:36am On Jul 13, 2021
I just can't understand why UN and other agencies are worried about Giant of Africa ,when we citizens are least bothered as our final aim is Heaven or Jannat .We have GOD on our side and GOD will guide us through .



Typical Nigerian man thought process

5 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Asgard73: 8:37am On Jul 13, 2021
byinks:


A whole tribe you said.... ridiculous !

Tinubu represents Yoruba people.

And Yoruba people have not denied it.

3 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by appishani1(m): 9:26am On Jul 13, 2021
Mikecold:
Relocating from north east?
no. from this part of zambisa to another one. zambisa is too big oooh
Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by mannobi(m): 11:20am On Jul 13, 2021
All I can say is that buhari very bad economic policies brought about this poverty and scarcity
Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by CruiseMaster1: 11:20am On Jul 13, 2021
It has never been this bad,may God help the common man
Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Splitmind: 11:20am On Jul 13, 2021
FAKE NEWS! More rubbish by international agents of destruction to tarnish our President's reputation. How many hungry people have you seen this week?

1 Like

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nobody: 11:20am On Jul 13, 2021
there's no truth in this News.. Nigeria borrow to feed us..this country really need delivery
Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by lazkizz(m): 11:21am On Jul 13, 2021
When my My grandma was alive she lived below $1 a day but she never went to bed hungry because she grew her own product... Back then if you dash her money she go dash the money to her lil grandkids she had no use for it. Following the white man's definition of poverty (one who lives on less than $1 a day), you'd conclude that my grandma was poor, but in reality she was wealthy.

7 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by DropsMic(m): 11:21am On Jul 13, 2021
Until the black man learns how to use the brain nature gave him, his suffering will never stop.

7 Likes

Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Nobody: 11:21am On Jul 13, 2021
vv
Re: Nigerians Borrow To Feed As Food Prices Soar Amid Stagnated Income by Maxymilliano(m): 11:22am On Jul 13, 2021
Nigerians are already at rock bottom , yet no succor from the government.

1 Like

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