By Toyin Falola
At the time of writing this article, the naira has fallen from over 1,230 naira to a single dollar, the highest ever recorded in Nigeriaâs history. A few years ago, saying that the naira would ever trade at over a thousand to a single dollar would have sounded like a dream. No one could foresee it. Yet here we are. To say that the fast-rising price of the naira has wrought untold hardship on Nigerians is understating it. With Nigeria being a state with very few exports outside crude oil and highly dependent on imports, the ever-weakening naira has made trade and importation very difficult. The effect of all this is that an astronomically high cost of living has been forced upon all Nigerians.
The rapidly rising costs of living have begun to force Nigerians to radically adjust the way they live and work. Every day, we are forced to develop innovative ways to cut costs in this increasingly tough economy. So, for instance, owing to the sky-high prices of fuel, a lot of car owners have stopped driving their cars and now prefer to commute via public transportation or ride-hailing services. A number of companies are increasingly switching to hybrid or completely remote systems of work in order to cut costs. Not everyone is so lucky, as there is a significant number of Nigerians not fortunate enough to have the option of going remote, yet transport costs to their current jobs eat too deeply into their salaries. They are left with no option but to resign and begin the gruelling and uncertain process of seeking new employment.
Farm produce
So yes, we see how the ever-rising cost of living in Nigeria forces its citizens to develop coping mechanisms every day in order to survive. However, when it comes to the cost of food, the agony touches Nigerians on a different level. Just a month ago, a cup of rice cost about 500 naira. Today, you canât get it for anything less than 800 naira. Same for a cup of beans. The reason this matters is that Nigerians already spend the majority of their income on food. Data from Picodi, an international e-commerce organization, has revealed that the average Nigerian household spends 59 per cent of its income on food. According to data from a statistical analysis carried out on 105 countries of the world aimed at discovering how much people spend on their groceries, Nigeria ranked number 105, the highest in the world. To put this into better context, the global average for the percentage of household income spent on food is 11 per cent.
This gap between the global average and the local average is alarming. And what makes this fact only more worrying is that this report was from over two months ago. The cost of food has risen since then. Prices of foodstuff are still rising in a state that has already been eaten so deeply by food insecurity. When a state that is already plagued by record levels of poverty and hunger is threatened by even more poverty and hunger, the ripple effects cannot be anything but deadly.
In the absence of gainful employment for many Nigerian youth, as the suffering becomes unbearable, many will inevitably be pushed into crime. The lowest hanging fruit for many is cybercrime, popularly known as âYahoo Yahooâ. Cybercrime or fraud is already a widespread phenomenon in Nigeria. In fact, it is practically a staple of Nigerian culture at this point. From several songs celebrating it to the populace idolizing those who practice it, cybercrime has sadly become a cancer that has devoured Nigerian society, particularly the demographic of the male youth.
As inflation worsens and costs of living rise, this disturbing cancer called fraud is only going to eat deeper into society. It was only last week when Justina Tiffany Otuene, a 300-level Biochemistry student from the University of Calabar, was killed by her boyfriend, who was a student at the same university. It has been alleged that the murder was a ritual killing. Again, on the 20th of October, robbers stormed three banks in Otukpo, Benue State, and killed seven people, two of whom were security operatives. The three banks include Zenith Bank, First Bank Plc, and United Bank for Africa.
This ghastly wave of crime and scares is just a symptom of a deeply rooted illness in the Nigerian system. Fraud, Ritual killings, kidnappings, Robberies, Organ trafficking, and Child trafficking are the gruesome crimes that epitomize the Nigerian conditionâa reflection of the new normal. As more and more people get thrown into poverty, more Nigerians will be forced into crime. And while we can spend all day debating whether poverty justifies people turning to crime or not, the fact remains that poverty makes it increasingly harder for men to survive. When men are forced to choose between harming others in order to survive and starving to death, between their survival and the survival of others, many will be forced to choose themselves.
At this juncture, it is critical to point out that this is not a justification for crime. Cyberfraud, ritual killings, kidnappings, and all other crimes and condemnable and are, in fact, mostly caused by greed. What this argument simply aims to point out is that when a government repeatedly makes poor decisions, it accumulates and creates a harsh environment that will inevitably enable the worst of human nature. Nothing justifies these wicked acts. People must always strive to earn an honest, crime-free living. But the government must not make this noble pursuit more difficult than it already is.
Sadly, the government has failed to ensure this. So we must now have a conversation about what the people themselves must do. It is often a customary Nigerian reflex to hold out hope. To hope that things will get better. Will the exchange rate rise to 1300 naira to a single dollar? We all certainly hope not. But it is submitted that sitting on our asses and hoping is not the wisest thing to do. It is not even the wisest hope. If the past is any reliable data to predict by, then the naira hasnât yet hit rock bottom.
From 150 naira to a dollar to 500 to 800, Nigerians remained in disbelief as they watched the naira weaken and fall across several years and different governments. And no matter how many governments have promised to turn the economy around, the downward trend has not stopped. Thus, it would be foolhardy to expect that the naira will suddenly reach a new record low, change its mind, and start seeking upwards. No! Unfortunately, it can still get much worse.
Thus, Nigerians must steel themselves and shift their minds from conversations about hope to conversations about how to prepare for the worst. And how do we prepare for the worst? Well Nigerians have already started adopting several cost-saving measures, such as going remote and using alternative modes of transportation.
For starters, it would seem that the ever-weakening naira has defeated the conventional wisdom of âdelayed gratificationâ. If everything gets more expensive, waiting to buy automatically becomes a bad financial decision. For the foreseeable future, it is probably best if you purchase everything you want to buy as early as you can rather than delaying ratification and paying more for it down the line.
Also, since the majority of our income is spent on food and non-alcoholic beverages, it is recommended that Nigerians start to make their purchases in bulk. Cutting down on unnecessary expenses such as eating out also helps to cut costs. Beyond that, Nigerians must take extra precautions regarding their security and the security of their finances. Not only are ritual killings, robberies, and kidnappings going to go up, but the rate of fraud attacks as well. We must guard our financial details with utmost care and be careful with our movement.
In conclusion, until the Nigerian government begins to implement effective policies that strengthen the naira, Nigerian citizens are in for a hard time for the foreseeable future. Nigerians are already trying their hardest to adapt to these unreasonable costs of living. The government must play its part by providing targeted support for lacking populations and executing responsible fiscal management alongside viable monetary policies to stabilize the weak naira and lay a foundation for long-term economic development.
PS: This piece was written in Gboko, Benue State. I am grateful to Professor Zack Gundu, Vice-Chancellor University of Mkar, who generously provided the space and the inspiration.