The Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise has called for a shift toward supply-side interventions to curb inflation, amid rising energy and transport costs linked to Middle East tensions.
CPPE said monetary tightening alone cannot address Nigeria’s inflation challenge and risks further weakening investment and productivity.
Leadership reported that speaking, the director/CEO of CPPE, Dr. Muda Yusuf said, “Nigeria’s inflation outlook in April 2026 reflects a fragile disinflation process amid mounting global and domestic cost pressures.
“Headline inflation rose marginally from 15.38 per cent in March to 15.69 per cent in April, indicating that although inflationary pressures remain elevated, the pace of acceleration was relatively moderate.”
He noted that “the dominant inflation drivers continue to be food, transportation, energy products, healthcare and restaurant services, which together accounted for about 87 per cent of the inflation pressure recorded in April. These are essential expenditure items which absorb the bulk of household income, particularly among low-income Nigerians.
“The current geopolitical tensions involving Iran, Israel and the United States are also intensifying inflationary risks. The conflict has triggered renewed volatility in the global oil market, pushing up crude oil prices and transmitting higher energy costs into the domestic economy.
“Rising petrol, diesel and gas prices are fueling transportation, logistics and production costs across sectors, with significant pass-through effects on food prices and overall consumer inflation.”
He added that this further underscores the structural and supply-side nature of Nigeria’s inflation challenge, saying that “monetary tightening alone cannot resolve inflation driven by energy costs, logistics inefficiencies, food supply disruptions and weak infrastructure conditions.
“Additional monetary tightening could worsen financing costs for businesses, weaken investment and further constrain productivity growth.”
Yusuf disclosed that the policy priority should shift more decisively towards supply-side interventions, saying that government at both federal and state levels should intensify measures to reduce energy costs, improve transportation infrastructure, strengthen food supply systems, enhance trade facilitation and support domestic productivity.
“For businesses, the operating environment remains extremely challenging. Firms should prioritize energy efficiency, dynamic pricing models, consumer segmentation and affordability-driven product strategies, including smaller pack sizes, as consumers become increasingly price-sensitive and discretionary spending weakens,” he stated.
He pointed out that “the April inflation numbers suggest that while inflationary momentum may be moderating, the disinflation process remains highly vulnerable to external shocks, especially geopolitical developments in the global energy market.
“Sustained inflation moderation will depend largely on structural reforms and targeted interventions to reduce the cost of food, transportation and energy within the economy.”

