FINANCIAL MATTERS: Inflation, what do the numbers mean?

FINANCIAL MATTERS: Inflation, what do the numbers mean?

The inflation
numbers for February are in, and they do surprise. Prices, it seems,
are not growing as fast as they did two months ago. According to the
new numbers, consumer prices in the country rose by 11.1% in the year
to February, down from 12.1% in the year to January. Why? The most
basic problem with inflation statistics in the country is its failure
to tell a coherent story.

Before the 12.1% in
January, the Composite Consumer Price Index (CPI) was 11.8% in
December, and 12.8% in November. Try as hard as you may, it is well
nigh impossible to make sense of these movements, still less predict,
on this basis, the inflation trajectory over three months.

In an election
year, there were reasons galore to imagine that government spending was
going to be a major source of pressure on domestic prices. Pork-barrel
politics is almost unavoidable in a democracy as young as ours, and
with its lack of proper political party/electorate connections. The
structure of government spending is an additional consideration. For a
while now, the bulk of it has been on consumption.

So, if government
was going to spend more in an election year, invariably it was going to
do this at a time when its failure to spend money to improvie domestic
productive capacity has limited supply responses across every sector of
the economy. Moreover, did it matter for relative prices in the local
economy that this is a government that has, since coming into office,
made a poor fist of staying within its spending commitments? Maybe!

The new inflation
numbers upend this logic. Strange though this is, it would seem that
government has not spent as much as most commentators had anticipated.
That somehow, its spending has been sufficiently sterilised.
Alternatively, that because domestic prices have become insulated from
government over-spend, and with both consumer spending and business
investment in the doldrums, inflation is well contained.

There is a
different possibility. Monetary policy may just be working a lot better
than we give the process credit for. Beginning at its September 2010
meeting, the Central Bank of Nigeria’s rate setting committee (the
Monetary Policy Committee – MPC) signalled a lower appetite for
inflation when it added 25 basis points to the policy rate to move it
from 6.0% to 6.25%.

This concern with
“continued high inflation rate” was re-visited at the MPC’s November
meeting, where, even though it agreed to keep the policy rate unchanged
at 6.25%, it included “fiscal consolidation and the continuation of
comprehensive economic and structural reforms to remove supply-side
bottlenecks,” as necessary conditions to relieve the build-up of
pressure on domestic prices. January this year, MPC members voted 11 to
1 to put up the policy rate by another 25 basis points. “Perceived
inflation risks in the near term” was again the main worry of the
monetary tightening process.

Giving this effort,
what chance is there that the CBN’s signals may have worked to moderate
the adverse effects of fiscal excesses on domestic prices?

The apex bank
itself will not pretend that it has a firm enough grip on the
relationship between its base rates and domestic prices, that it then
takes comfort from any of this. The best that can still be said is that
by tinkering with its policy rate, the CBN can nudge interbank rates
along certain tracks for some distance.

But by how much it
can do this is still moot. Anyway, the CBN’s efforts cannot matter that
much, given that the industry through which its rate increases ought to
affect domestic prices, has very tenuous linkages with the real economy.

That said, there
are still questions arising from the inflation numbers. The National
Bureau of Statistics indicates that “Average monthly food prices rose
by 2.9% in February 2011 when compared with January 2011 figure. The
level of the Composite Food Index was higher than the corresponding
level a year ago by 12.2%. The average annual rate of rise of the index
was 13.9% for the twelve-month period ending February 2011”.

Thus, prices did
come under pressure, and significantly too. What the new numbers allude
to is that compared with the figure for the corresponding period last
year, domestic prices have not risen as fast.

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