Security
Economist Hinges Soaring Food Price To Incessant Insecurity
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Economist Hinges Soaring Food Price To Incessant Insecurity
By Lucius Ken
Adevelopment economist, Ken Ife, says insecurity has been the major cause of rising food prices.
“Fewer farmers are growing crops, and many can no longer go to the farm out of fear. Eighty per cent of rural production, processing and marketing of food is done by women.
“Insecurity has made it also dangerous for these women to go to harvest their crops,’’ he said in an interview on Thursday in Abuja.
The economist explained that there were five components of inflation, and the foodstuff basket index was the highest.
“You have the foodstuff basket index, and it is the highest inflation. It is five points above the headline inflation, which is now 28.92 per cent, while the food basket inflation is 33.93 per cent.
“Food inflation has remained at a very high altitude for more than three years, which means that whatever is happening to Nigeria’s food equation is systemic,’’ he said.
Mr Ife called on the federal government to apply more pressure in tackling insecurity.
According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the food inflation rate for December 2023 increased to 33.93 per cent on a year-on-year basis.
It reported that the December 2023 level was 10.18 per cent points higher compared to the rate recorded in December 2022 at 23.75 per cent.
It also reported that increases in the prices of bread and cereals, oil and fat, potatoes, yams, and other tubers caused the rise in food inflation on a year-on-year basis in December 2023.
The NBS also reported a steady increase in prices of beef, rice, beans, onion, tomato, yam, bread, oil, and other food items in December 2023.