Inflation in Nigeria is not a news flash. It has been a persistent feature of the economy for decades. The naira has lost significant value against foreign currencies. Food prices climb year on year. Savings accounts offer interest rates that rarely keep pace with how fast prices are rising. This is the environment in which millions of Nigerians are trying to build and preserve wealth.
In this environment, the assets that hold their value and ideally grow their value are the ones tied to things people cannot stop needing. People must eat. And as food prices rise, the value of what a farmer produces rises with them. This is the core argument for agriculture as an inflation-resistant investment: the output is a necessity, and necessities do not lose demand during inflation. They gain it.
“Inflation punishes people who hold cash. It rewards people who hold assets that produce things other people need. Food is the most fundamental of those assets.”
The Food Price Connection
When inflation rises in Nigeria, food prices go up. Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics reported that food inflation reached 40.01% in December 2024 before moderating slightly in early 2025. This is partly because fuel and logistics costs rise, making it more expensive to move food from farms to markets. But it is also because food supply in Nigeria remains structurally limited and not enough is produced domestically to fully meet demand.
For a farm investor, rising food prices are not bad news. They are a direct upward revision to the value of what your farm produces at harvest. If tomatoes sold for โฆ40,000 per tonne when you planted in January and they sell for โฆ55,000 per tonne when you harvest in April, your returns improved not because you did anything differently but because the market moved in your favour.
This is the opposite of what happens with cash. Money sitting in a savings account loses purchasing power when prices rise. A farm that is growing loses nothing during that same period and in fact tends to benefit from the very forces that erode the value of money.
The Export Crop and Naira Depreciation Angle
There is a second mechanism at work for investors in export-linked crops, and it is worth understanding clearly. Crops like cashew and cocoa are sold on global markets and priced in dollars or euros. The amount a Nigerian farmer receives in naira for their harvest depends on the international price of the crop multiplied by the current exchange rate.
When the naira depreciates, the naira value of dollar-priced export crops goes up. Nigeria is the world’s largest producer of raw cashew by volume according to the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations, and cashew is sold internationally in dollars. A harvest worth $10,000 on the international market translates to far more naira today than it would have three years ago, simply because the exchange rate has moved.
This is a powerful position for diaspora investors in particular. When you invest in an export crop, you are keeping your money in a dollar-linked asset while it sits in Nigerian soil. That is a meaningful hedge against currency depreciation that most naira-denominated investments simply cannot offer.
What This Does Not Mean
It would be dishonest to suggest that farming is immune to all economic pressures. It is not. Fuel costs affect input prices. Transportation costs affect how much it costs to get produce to market. Labour costs rise with inflation too. And if global commodity prices fall, as they sometimes do, export crop returns can soften even when local inflation is high.
The point is not that farming beats inflation in every scenario. The point is that the underlying economics of food production are structured differently from other assets. Food is consumed and must be replaced. The demand cycle never stops. And a well-managed farm operating in a food-deficit economy like Nigeria’s has structural advantages that savings accounts and most other naira-denominated investments simply do not have.
How to Position Your Farm Portfolio for Inflation Protection
If inflation protection is part of your investment goal, a few choices make your farm portfolio more resilient. First, include at least one export crop in your mix. Cashew and cocoa are the most accessible for most investors and managed farms exist across southwest Nigeria for both. Second, include crops with stable year-round demand such as cassava, maize, and plantain. Their market may not spike dramatically but demand rarely disappears entirely.
Third, avoid putting all your capital into a single crop type in a single cycle. Diversify across different crops and different timelines the same way you would diversify any investment portfolio. A fish pond cycle, a vegetable unit, and a cassava farm running at the same time give you three different harvest windows and three different market exposure points across the year.
Priced in dollars on global markets. As the naira falls, naira earnings rise. Nigeria is the world’s largest producer of raw cashew by volume according to the FAO. These crops offer both local food value and international currency linkage.
These are daily essentials for Nigerian households. When inflation rises, their prices rise alongside it. Demand stays consistent regardless of economic conditions because they are basic food items.
Protein prices in Nigeria rise sharply during inflationary periods. Fish and broiler chicken are among the most consumed protein sources in the country and demand stays high even when incomes are squeezed.
The Risk of Doing Nothing Is Also a Risk
This is not an argument that farming is without risk. It is an argument that the risk of doing nothing with your money, letting it sit in a savings account while inflation eats into it month after month, is also a risk. Most people only see the risk of acting. They forget to account for the very real cost of staying still.
The question is not whether to take a risk. The question is which risk to take and how to take it wisely. A well-managed farm in a food-producing state of Nigeria, growing crops with consistent domestic demand and ideally with some export linkage, is one of the most sensible places a Nigerian investor can put capital in a high-inflation environment. Not because it is guaranteed to succeed, but because the structural forces working in its favour are real and verifiable.
Protect your wealth through real, productive assets
Vantage Nigeria helps investors build farm portfolios that account for their timeline, risk tolerance, and the economic environment they are investing in. If inflation protection is part of your goal, we can design a crop mix that serves that purpose. Book a free consultation at vantagenigeria.com.
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