Nigeria poverty hits 63% despite easing inflation – W’Bank

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Poverty in Nigeria rose to 63 per cent in 2025, despite a slowdown in inflation, indicating the limited impact of recent macroeconomic improvements on household welfare, the World Bank has said.

The bank disclosed this in its Nigeria Development Update (April 2026) titled “Nigeria’s Tomorrow Must Start Today: The Case for Early Childhood Development,” released in Abuja on Tuesday.

Data presented in the report showed that the share of Nigerians living below the poverty line increased from 56 per cent in 2023 to 61 per cent in 2024, before peaking at 63 per cent in 2025.

The rise in the poverty rate to about 140 million Nigerians occurred even as inflation began to ease during the period, indicating a disconnect between price moderation and real income growth.

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A report in The Punch said Nigeria’s headline inflation rate declined sharply from 34.80 per cent in December 2024 to 15.15 per cent in December 2025, representing a drop of 19.65 percentage points, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.

Similarly, food inflation fell from about 39.84 per cent in December 2024 to 10.84 per cent in December 2025, indicating a steep decline of roughly 29 percentage points over the period.

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The sharp moderation in both headline and food inflation reflects easing price pressures and base effects following the CPI rebasing, although the earlier spike had already eroded household purchasing power.

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