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NBS to ‘normalise’ December inflation data over projected spike
By Lucy Emenike
Published on 12/01/2026 14:31
Business

The National Bureau of Statistics has said that it would ‘normalise’ Nigeria’s inflation data for December 2025 over a projected spike in last month’s Consumer Price Index.

This was disclosed on Monday during a virtual stakeholders engagement convened by the NBS and the Nigerian Economic Summit Group

NBS explained that the expected spike in inflation is driven by technical base effects linked to the recent rebasing of the inflation series rather than changes in economic fundamentals.

Multiple analysts have projected a spike in the headline inflation for December on the back of base effects. Projections ranged from 31.4–32.4 per cent year-on-year.

Providing the official position of the Bureau, Statistician General of the Federation and Chief Executive Officer of NBS, Adeyemi Adeniran, explained that the projected December spike stems from the rebasing of the CPI, which adopted 2024 as the new base year after a 15-year gap from the previous 2009 base.

He emphasised that base effects are a common feature of statistical practice, particularly in index-based measurements.

“Following the rebasing exercise and the methodology adopted for December 2025, a significant artificial spike in the inflation rate is expected, as some analysts have already projected. This spike arises from the base effect, with December 2024 equated to 100 following the rebasing.

“Base effects are common in statistical practice, particularly when comparing data across periods with unusually high or low prices. They are neither unexpected nor unusual.

“However, when such effects occur, especially when they are artificial and arithmetic rather than reflective of structural changes in the economy, it is essential to clearly communicate and explain them to users,” he stated.

Adeniran said transparency and accountability guided the Bureau’s decision to address the issue proactively.

“Transparency requires that we provide a clear picture of actual price changes rather than simply reporting an artificial spike that does not reflect economic realities. This is why we convened this meeting to inform our critical stakeholders and users of our data,” he added.

In his opening comments at the session, the NESG Chief Executive Officer, Dr Tayo Aduloju, underscored the growing importance of credible inflation data as Nigeria transitions from economic stabilisation to consolidation.

“As the economy shifts from stabilisation reforms to consolidation reforms, the role of official statistics—especially the CPI—becomes not less important, but very, very crucial,” Aduloju said.

He noted that preliminary assessments suggest inflation figures could record temporary technical spikes, stressing that such outcomes should be carefully interpreted.

 

 

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