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Inflation may push 91 million Nigerians below poverty line – W’Bank

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Inflation1The World Bank says the general increase in food prices which occurred between June 2020 and June 2021 may have increased the percentage of Nigerians living below the national poverty line from 40.1 per cent to 42.8 per cent.

The bank said this in a new report titled, ‘COVID-19 in Nigeria: Frontline Data and Pathways for Policy.’

According to Worldometer, the current population of Nigeria is 213,145,112 as of Wednesday. Forty two per cent of the current population means about 91 million Nigerians may have been pushed below the national poverty line in one year due to inflation.

The report read in part, “The rise in prices witnessed between June 2020 and June 2021 alone could push another six million Nigerians into poverty, with urban areas being disproportionately affected; this underscores the need for short-term policies to support welfare.

“The simple simulations suggest that the share of Nigerians living below the national poverty line could have increased from 40.1 per cent (85 million) to 42.8 per cent (91 million), due to the food price inflation witnessed between June 2020 and June 2021.”

The report also disclosed that poorer Nigerians were more willing to be vaccinated unlike richer Nigerians, which further showed that the poor were more concerned about contracting the virus.

“Poorer Nigerians are more willing than richer Nigerians to be vaccinated. About 98 per cent of respondents in the poorest consumption quintile reported that they would agree to be vaccinated, compared to 74 per cent of those in the richest consumption quintile.

“As such, the differences between rich and poor respondents in their willingness to be vaccinated echo similar differences in their respective levels of concern about contracting COVID-19,” the report read in part.

It also disclosed that some Nigerians did not have access to soap and water to maintain good hygiene during the pandemic.

“The most easily accessible COVID-19 preventative measure is washing one’s hands with soap and water; however, insufficient access to soap and water for washing was a barrier for some households. As of June 2020, 24 per cent of households reported having insufficient soap, and 7 per cent reported having insufficient water for washing hands.

“Yet access to hygiene-related basic needs increased between June 2020 and November 2020, with the share of households having insufficient soap to wash hands in the last seven days declining from 24 per cent to 11 per cent,” it added.

The report further disclosed that there had been low coverage of social protection programmes during the COVID-19 crisis in Nigeria, adding only four per cent of households had received support from social safety net programmes in the form of direct cash transfers from the federal, state, or local government between March 2020 and March 2021.

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