The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has reported a sharp rise in inflation for March 2025, with the Consumer Price Index (CPI) showing a month-on-month increase of 3.90%, up from 2.04% in February.
This marks a significant acceleration in the general price level, driven by higher costs across key categories such as food, transport, housing, and energy. On a year-on-year basis, food inflation stood at 21.79%, reflecting the sustained pressure on household spending, especially for low- and middle-income earners.
According to the NBS report, the increase in headline inflation is largely attributed to rising prices of items in the consumption basket, including food and non-alcoholic beverages, education, health, accommodation, and clothing. Specific food items such as fresh ginger, yellow garri, Ofada rice, natural honey, crabs, and plantain flour contributed to the surge.
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On a month-on-month basis, food inflation rose to 2.18% in March from 1.67% in February, indicating continued strain on everyday staples. The core inflation rate, which excludes volatile items like farm produce and energy, climbed to 3.73% from 2.52% in February, reflecting underlying inflationary pressures.
Energy inflation saw a dramatic shift, hitting 9.21% in March after recording a negative growth of –0.99% in February, suggesting significant jumps in electricity, gas, and other fuel-related costs.
Urban areas recorded higher inflation than rural regions, with a year-on-year urban inflation rate of 26.12%, compared to 20.89% in rural areas. On a month-on-month basis, urban inflation rose to 3.96%, while rural inflation reached 3.73%. The NBS noted that the higher rates in urban areas are tied to housing, transport, and service-related expenses, which disproportionately affect city dwellers and urban small businesses.
The persistent inflationary trend poses a challenge to household purchasing power and small business operating costs, with many SMEs likely to feel the impact of rising input prices and consumer price resistance.