According to the National Bureau of Statistics in its  recently released inflation report, Nigeria’s inflation rate fell further in November 2021, to 15.4 percent, from 15.99 percent the previous month. 


According to the report, the latest figures are the lowest since November 2020, when the CPI rose by 14.89 percent. Meanwhile, on a month-to-month basis, the Headline index increased by 1.08 percent in November 2021, which is 0.10 percent higher than the rate recorded in October 2021. (0.98 percent ).


The urban inflation rate increased by 15.92 percent (year on year) in November 2021, up from 15.47 percent in November 2020, while the rural inflation rate increased by 14.89 percent in November 2021, up from 14.33 percent in November 2020.


Food inflation  also fell significantly in November 2021, from 18.34 percent in October 2021 to 17.21 percent in November 2021. Inflation in food has fallen to its lowest level in 14 months. The food sub-index increased by 1.07 percent month on month in November 2021, up 0.16 percent points from 0.91 percent in October 2021.

It is worth noting that price increases in bread and cereals, fish, food products, potatoes, yam and other tubers, oil and fats, milk, cheese, and eggs, as well as coffee, tea, and cocoa, contributed to the rise in the food index.


The “All items less farm produce” inflation rate, which excludes volatile agricultural produce prices, was 13.85 percent in the review month, up from 13.24 percent the previous month.


Prices for gas, liquid fuel, other services, garments, vehicle spare parts, road passenger transport, non-durable household goods, jewellery clocks and watches, air passenger transport, pharmaceutical products, appliances, articles and products for personal care, cleaning, repair, and hire of clothing, and fuels and lubricants for personal transport equipment increased the most.

All-items inflation was highest in Gombe (18.54 percent), Jigawa (17.54 percent), and Nasarawa (17.43 percent) in November 2021, while Kwara (11.73 percent), River (13.36 percent), and Edo (13.50 percent) recorded the slowest rise in headline Year on Year inflation.


Still on  food inflation, Gombe State had the highest year-on-year increase at 21.83 percent, followed by Kogi (21.09 percent) and Nasarawa State (20.48 percent), while Edo (14.12 percent), Rivers (14.31 percent), and Osun (14.45 percent) had the slowest rise.