The World Bank has predicted that persistent insecurity,
armed conflict, and deteriorating livelihoods will continue to affect local
government areas in Borno, Kaduna, Katsina, Sokoto, Yobe, Zamfara states, and
the far north of Adamawa State in Nigeria until May 2024.
It noted that poor macroeconomic conditions are restricting
access to agricultural inputs in the affected states and it is set to affect
cereal production in the country.
The global bank, in its latest ‘Food Security Update’ stated
that estimated cereal production for the 2023/24 crop year is expected to be
76.5 million tons in West and Central Africa, which is a two per cent decrease
from the previous season, but a three per cent rise from the average for the
last five years.
The report stated that Chad, Mali, Niger, and Nigeria are
expected to contribute the most to the decline.
According to Bretton Woods’s institution, “Projections
indicate a decline in production from last year in Chad, Mali, Niger, and
Nigeria.
“This decrease is attributed to dry spells during the growing
season and insecurity that limited access to cropland in Chad, Mali, and Niger
and to poor macroeconomic conditions that have restricted access to
agricultural inputs in Nigeria.”
It also noted that most of the sub-region’s areas will remain
in the minimally food insecure category from November to May 2024.
It added that over the same period, (November to May 2024),
Crisis (IPC Phase 3) conditions, mainly caused by persistent insecurity and
armed conflict, and deteriorating livelihoods, are projected to affect local
government areas in Borno, Kaduna, Katsina, Sokoto, Yobe, Zamfara states, and
the far north of Adamawa state in Nigeria.
Other places, according to the report, include places in
Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Mali, and Niger.
It stated that information from the latest month between
August and November 2023 for which food price inflation data are available
shows high inflation in many low and middle-income countries, with inflation
higher than 5 per cent in 61.9 per cent of low-income countries (no change
since the last update two weeks ago), 76.1 per cent of lower-middle-income
countries (3.9-percentage-point decrease), 50.0 per cent of upper-middle-income
countries (no change), and 57.4 per cent of high-income countries
(2.6-percentage point decrease).
According to the report, most-affected countries are in
Africa, North America, Latin America, South Asia, Europe, and Central Asia.
It said in November, Nigeria’s headline inflation rose to
28.20 per cent while food inflation soared to 32.84 per cent.
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