Nigeria’s cost-of-living pressures are translating into a measurable decline in household consumption, with a new analysis indicating that real spending power fell sharply over a three-year period despite higher nominal expenditure.
In a report published today, The Punch said household consumption in Nigeria dropped by ₦21.33 trillion in real terms between 2021 and 2024, even though naira spending increased over the same period. The report links the decline to persistent inflation and currency weakness, which reduced what families could actually afford in terms of goods and services.
The trend reflects a familiar reality for consumers: rising prices mean households may spend more money but take home less. Food inflation, energy costs, transport fares, and rent pressures have forced many families to cut back, switch to cheaper substitutes, reduce quantity purchases, or shift spending away from non-essential categories such as leisure, clothing, or discretionary services.
Economists say the decline in real consumption is significant because household spending is a major driver of economic activity. Weak consumption can reduce revenues for retailers and consumer-facing businesses, tighten margins for manufacturers, and slow hiring—especially in sectors that depend on volume sales like FMCG, transport, hospitality, and informal trading.
The report comes as policymakers continue to juggle stabilisation priorities, including exchange-rate reforms and efforts to tighten financial conditions to curb inflation. While these steps may support macro stability over time, they can impose short-term pressure on households, particularly where wage growth does not match inflation.
Stakeholders cited in the report urged stronger measures to control inflation and stabilise the naira, arguing that a more predictable currency environment would reduce imported inflation and improve purchasing power.
Analysts also stress that structural levers matter: improving food supply through security for farming communities, better logistics, reduced post-harvest losses, and more reliable power can lower cost pressures beyond what monetary policy alone can achieve.
For businesses, the consumption squeeze is likely to reinforce strategies such as smaller pack sizes, leaner distribution models, and greater focus on value-for-money pricing. For government, it raises the stakes for targeted social support, job creation, and productivity-driven growth.




