She is among millions in Africa's largest economy, grappling
with the worst cost of living crisis in decades, that has deepened since
President Bola Tinubu introduced bold but unpopular economic reforms after he
assumed office last May.
Last year, Joseph could easily make 30,000 naira ($18.83) a
week but now she will be lucky to get 5,000 naira, she said.
"People used to place orders. I'll design for them,
sometimes even (for) weddings I'll make souvenirs for them, but now those
orders are not coming," said the 29-year-old Abuja resident.
"It has been very, very difficult, especially that I
have a son and he needs to go to school, he needs to eat."
Tinubu inherited an economy that was already struggling with
record debt, high unemployment, low oil output, subsidies that drained
government finances and power shortages that have crimped growth.
Nigeria imports food and fuel and was buffeted by high
global prices due to the Russia-Ukraine war, just as it had exited a COVID-19
induced recession in 2020.
Tinubu, who campaigned on a "Renewed Hope" slogan,
removed a costly petrol subsidy and foreign currency controls, in an effort to
improve government finances, restore credibility with investors and kick-start
the economy.
But inflation has soared to its highest in three decades and
the naira currency is slumping to record lows, pressured by acute dollar
shortages. Prices of food, cooking gas, medicines, fuel, and public transport
have shot up, squeezing household budgets.
"With about 8 percent of Nigerians deemed food
insecure, addressing rising food insecurity is the immediate policy
priority," the International Monetary Fund said on March 4. after a staff
visit.
Nigeria's problems have also rippled through company
boardrooms.
Foreign companies like Procter & Gamble will stop
manufacturing in Nigeria, while drug makers GSK Plc and Bayer AG will contract
third parties to distribute their products, in part due to tough operating
conditions and the naira slump.
Africa's biggest telecoms operator MTN Group (MTNJ.J), opens
new tab posted a big fall in full-year profit citing naira devaluation, which
also prompted soap maker PZ Cussons Plc (PZC.L), opens new tab to issue a
profit warning.
FOOD PRICE SURGE
At Agodo market in Lagos, tomato seller Farouk Dalhatu has
just served his first customer in eight hours. The market is unusually quiet
for the time of day when there is often a cacophonous din of traders and
customers haggling over prices.
A basket of tomatoes now costs 55,000 naira - about double
the national minimum wage - up from 12,000 naira in December. That has forced
many of Dalhatu's friends to quit the business.
"They are just trying to find what they can eat now and
not do the tomatoes business," he said, pointing to several empty stalls.
Escalating food prices are the major driver of inflation.
Widespread insecurity in food growing areas - including
abduction for ransom by armed gangs, a long-running Islamist insurgency and
farmer-herder clashes - is adding to the woes by keeping many farmers away from
their fields.
"We have an emergency on our hands in terms of the
social consequences of this reform, in terms of this food insecurity,"
said Muda Yusuf, CEO at business advocacy firm Promotion of Private Enterprise,
referring to the currency and fuel subsidy reforms.
Labour unions led some protests last month and have
threatened to shut down the country to demand a tenfold rise in the minimum
wage.
In response, the government on Thursday started national
consultations on a new monthly minimum wage, which has been pegged at 30,000
naira since 2019.
A presidency spokesman declined to comment, but Tinubu's
administration has announced handouts of cash, grains, fertiliser and seed to
vulnerable groups.
Unions say this is not enough and that focus should be on
"substantive issues" that have been under discussion with the
government since June 2023.
"These include critical matters such as wage increases,
social welfare programs, infrastructure development, and the revitalisation of
key sectors such as education and healthcare," the Nigeria Labour Congress
said in a statement.
For Joseph in Abuja, a thriving business and providing for
her son is all she wants.
"I am just thinking about what he will eat if he comes
back (from school)," she said while shuffling through empty pots.