Latest Reports

A Shop on Buka Street

By Kafilat Taiwo and Funmilayo Babatunde

January 31, 2024

+Keeping up with the Prices

A Shop on Buka Street

Beyond the sibling rivalry on Buka Street, there is a lucrative market for those catering to the food needs of Nigerians.

People now spend a larger proportion of their total expenses on food at restaurants than in the past 10 years.

This comes at a time when the proportion of total expenses spent on eating inside the home declined by 19%. It declined from 64% of total expenses in 2010 to 45% of same in 2020. 

On the other hand, cooked food purchased outside the home increased by 11% in the same period. 

As of 2010, Nigerians actually spent less than 1% of their total expenses eating outside their homes. By 2020, they spent 11% extra eating on Buka Street.

So, if you’re considering a side hustle or a new enterprise, think of setting up a local restaurant on Buka Street. 

Relying on the NBS list, here are areas you could think of catering to: 

Shifting Priorities?

It’s often said: A person’s personal budget reveals their values. 

The NBS’ Consumption Pattern in Nigeria Report for 2010 and 2020 reveals that Nigerians’ spending priorities have shifted towards social services such as Education and Health more than other infrastructural services like Transport and Telecommunications.

They now spend 6% of their total expenditure on Education, a 5.5% increase over 0.6% in 2010.

Same goes for Health at 6.1% of their total expenditure, a 5.4% increase over the 0.7% 10 years ago.

These two are followed by Transport with an increase of 3.1% and Telecoms services increasing by 1%.

On the other hand, the proportion of spendings on rent declined most from 12.1% in 2010 to 5.3% in 2020. 

This is followed by the proportion of spendings on Household Goods, declining by 1.5% from 4.3% to 2.8%. Clothing and footwear marginally declined by 0.3%, from 4.8% to 4.5%.

This shifts could be due to shifting priorities but they could also be due to the increased cost of quality education and healthcare services in the country.

However, data shows that the cost of transport, housing and clothing and footwear actually increased more than education and health. 

It appears that individuals and households have just chosen to cut costs on things like transport, housing and rent, and clothing and footwear in order to keep up with their life’s priorities.

Keeping up with the Prices

Nigeria’s annual average inflation has exceeded 24% over 15 years, with the prices of goods and services increasing faster in the last 4 years, an analysis of data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reveals.

Owing to this, Nigerians parted with so much more money in buying goods last December than in any other year in the last 10 years.

Inflation is the measure of the rate of change in the price of commodities in the market. It signifies the strain on the people’s pockets as they pay more to purchase the same basket of goods month after month or year after year.