Nigeria’s consumer prices rose at the slowest pace in two and half years in June as food costs climbed the least since March 2016.
The annual consumer inflation rate was 11.2 percent from a year earlier, compared with 11.6 percent in May.
The inflation rate fell even as the Nigerian government started releasing funding for its record 2018 budget of 9.12 trillion naira ($25 billion), which some analysts had anticipated would cause prices to rise.
Price pressures are still expected to kick in on growing election-related spending ahead of February’s federal and state elections, with President Muhammadu Buhari seeking a second mandate.
The central bank’s monetary policy committee will tomorrow announce its decision on its main interest rate, which it has held at 14 percent since July 2016 to curb inflation.
The bank targets an inflation rate of 6 percent to 9 percent and has signaled rate cuts when price growth moves closer to this band.
Food prices increased 12.98 percent in June from a year earlier, a seventh straight month of deceleration, the agency said.