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Consumers priced out of essential products, foodstuffs as festive season approaches

*A recent survey indicates traders lament ‘we are tired and just managing. When you take a particular amount of money to buy the things you are selling… customers will be complaining as if you want to cheat them. The prices are so high, and we don’t know what we are doing now. We are just confused’

Web Editor | ConsumerConnect

As the festive season approaches, most Nigerian consumers might be unable to afford basic food items needed to have a fulfilled celebration after all, according to reports.

The reasons are with prices of essential products, including foodstuffs increasing by the day, the citizenry yet may face famine amid economic downturn in the country.

The Guardian investigation also revealed that prices of foodstuffs have doubled, and in some cases tripled, as traders attribute the rise to effects of COVID-19 pandemic, #EndSARS protests, border closure, increase in petrol (Premium Motor Spirit), and insecurity in the North-East region of the country.

Report said traders in markets related that prices of foodstuffs, in line with tradition, are supposed to reduce by now. They noted that what is happening is extremely unusual.

The survey found that in the last two months, prices of foodstuffs such as rice, beans, garri, yam, tomatoes, onion, pepper, palm oil and vegetable were at least 20 percent cheaper. As the day passes by, the prices record an astronomical increase.

In some popular markets in Lagos, the survey finding found that the price of tomatoes had also tripled within the last one month, as a basket jumped from N7,500 in October to between N15,000 and N22,000.

For pepper, a small bag which fluctuated between N4, 500 and N8, 000, has risen to about N12, 000. The big sack was sold for N50, 000.

It was also observed that a bag of beans which was sold by this time last year between N18,000 to N20,000 escalated to N26,000 as of October and further increased to N36,000.

A trader who identified himself as Usman said the prices of foodstuffs would continue to skyrocket on a daily basis.

Aliyu Hassan, who sells onions, tomatoes and pepper at Ile Epo (in Abule Egba area) market said: “A bag of onions now is N70,000. It was previously for N8,000.

Likewise, pepper is expensive now. For ‘tatase’, the small sack, which was sold for N5, 000, N6,000 and N8,000 previously, is now N10,000 while the big sack is N50,000. Hassan lamented that his customers have reduced drastically as they complain of cost.

According to Hassan, the low patronage has also affected his business in terms of profit-making and loss.

He said: “We no longer see customers like before, we are just managing. Only a few customers buy presently.

“Before I see enough gain. I can get nothing less than N5, 000 for selling a basket in a day, but now I get N1, 000 or N500 or N2, 000 as profit. This is because there are no sales. My goods get spoiled and I do not see my capital.

“Activities of Boko Haram and herdsmen in the north are preventing our farmers from planting, which is causing scarcity of food with the little ones available expensive to get.”

At Ikotun Market, Dorcas Opeyemi disclosed that a bag of onion is now sold for N75,000, the highest she has witnessed in her lifetime.

She noted that in the past few months, the same bag of onion fluctuated between N15, 000 and N12, 000.

For the dry onion, Mrs. Opeyemi stated, they are sold between N85,000 and N90,000 per bag, adding that tomatoes have increased from N7,500 to around N20,000 within a month.

The price of pepper has also gone up drastically, said the trader.

The increase in price to the continuous border closure, as she said: “When the border was not closed, the influx of tomatoes made the prices cheaper.

“Border closure has contributed to the increase. If the government opens the country’s border now, the prices of tomatoes will reduce to N3, 500 per basket. The prices of foodstuffs have tripled and are increasing by the day.

“Tomatoes, pepper and onions are unaffordable; it is affecting us. We hardly recover the capital much less profit. Customers complain about the prices.

“We buy the pepper and tomatoes from Mile 12 and Oke Odo market, where those who go to the north to buy the tomatoes sell them. Those that went this morning could not buy any goods, sometimes we go at night to buy because some of the goods come in at night.”

Another trader, who sells at Ipodo market said onions, which were sold between N15, 000 and N20,000, is now N70,000 per bag.

For tomatoes, the female trader noted: “We buy a basket now for N42, 000, whereas we used to buy it for N6, 000. For the smaller baskets, it is sold for N13, 000, N14, 000 and N15,000 now.”

“There is no money out there. Some customers will want to buy, but because they do not have enough money they don’t buy.”

She further lamented that “those customers that buy in large quantities no longer do, they are managing themselves. Those that buy pepper of N1,000 now buy that of N500 and N300 because there is no money.

“It is affecting us badly and we are no longer making sales. If this should continue people might die of hunger since there is no money to buy food and eat,” she lamented.

Danladi Sokoto, a yam seller at Ile Epo market, said 100 pieces of medium size yam tubers, which were sold between N17,000 and N19,000 in October, are now sold for N100,000.

Sokoto stated: “Yam is expensive now. We buy 100 tubers of small yams for N100,000. Before we buy at N17,000 or N19,000. When customers come and we tell them the price, they refuse to buy.

“We travel to the north to buy the yams at an expensive rate and then come back to sell based on the amount we bought them.

“Although, I still manage to make a profit, but not like before. Before I made a profit of N20,000 to N50,000, now I make N11,000. The coronavirus lockdown made things expensive.”

Anthony Nwibo, also a trader at Egbeda market said, “the prices of rice, beans and garri have gone up, as a bag of rice is sold between N27,000 and N24,000 based on the type. We still have some local rice of between N24, 000 and N25, 000 and above.

Nwibo revealed that “Garri is not the same thing; as of October it was around N14, 000, now it is between N12, 000 and N13,000, but it might likely go up.

“Things are going up unexpectedly. We buy our goods here in Nigeria yet they are expensive.”

On where he gets his rice, he said: “We get from Nigeria here, we don’t go outside to buy, we buy sometimes from companies that produce them here, while sometimes we order and they bring it to us.”

He, however, attributed the increase in prices of foodstuffs to dollar increment, increase in transportation due to hike in fuel price.

“Dollar increment is one of the causes of food inflation because you cannot expect those importing rice to bring it at a low price where there is dollar increment.

He noted that “customers are complaining so much because people don’t have the money. You see some people that are supposed to buy a bag of rice buying little because of the high prices and lack of money.”

Nwibo said of his profit margin amid increasing food prices: “When you are supposed to make more money, you make less money because those who are supposed to buy are having one complaint or the other, some are saying no money to buy while some are saying it is too expensive.

“Because of that, we are experiencing lower sales than before.”

Ifeanyi Okoro, who sells at Iyana Ipaja market, said that a 25-litre keg of groundnut oil, which was sold for N11,000 before the #EndSARS protest, is now sold between N15, 000 and N18,000, while a 25-litre keg of palm oil, which used to cost N11,000 about a month ago, is now sold for N13,500.

The trader attributed the increase in transportation fares as one of the causes of a hike in foodstuff prices as he gets them from the South-Eastern part of the country.

He rather lamented that “the Governments are not doing as well. They increased the electricity tariff, increased fuel price, so when we want to transport our goods, the drivers charge us more.

“All these factors cause an increase of goods in the market. This has affected my business badly, the customers are all complaining, they are not buying, since today we have not sold anything because of the price increase.”

Felix Opara, who sells in Ikotun market said: “The price we buy before is not what we buy now.

“When you buy today and go back tomorrow they have added money to it and we end up buying little quantities rather than the large quantity we wanted to buy.

“When you go and buy 10 bags of rice at the rate of, let’s say N26,000 and when you can’t sell everything by that time – going forward, if the market price drops and it becomes cheap, you end up losing because the prices are not steady

Opara stated: “Starting from when we start a lockdown everything is not easy for us. Immediately after the lockdown started, the prices of goods went up.

“Although, during the #EndSARS protest the prices came down a little bit because the borders were open for people to bring in goods.

“But as of now it has gone up and we are trying to make people understand that. Even the customers are not cooperating. When you tell them the price they shout.”

As far as Mummy Destiny, who sells at Oshodi market is concerned, “groundnut oil is very expensive. Before we were buying a gallon of groundnut oil for N8,000, but now it is N16,200.

“For Kings Oil, we are buying it now for N19, 500 and N18,500 whereas we were buying it before at N14,000.

“We are tired and just managing. When you take a particular amount of money to buy the things you are selling, especially this oil, customers will be complaining as if you want to cheat them whereas it is what you buy you are selling.

She further said: “We keep explaining to customers how much we bought it the last time and how much it is sold now. The company that produces this oil here in Nigeria should help us.

“The price increase has affected my business a lot. The money we use in buying two cartons, we use it to buy one now.

“You can see that the gap is too much. My shop is scanty because there is no money to fill it and the Government needs to do something about it.

“The prices are so high and we don’t know what we are doing now. We are just confused.”

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