Nigerian parents are complaining as they grapple with rising costs of tuition, transportation, and basic goods that have put pressure on household budgets as schools resume on Monday, September 9.
In an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria on Sunday, some parents expressed frustration as they prepare for the new academic session amid economic hardship.
Mr Chimuze Eze, a banker, said that last yearโs increase in school-related expenses had continued this year, worsening the situation.
โLast year, we experienced an increase in school fees; transportation to schools was almost doubled. Now, we are also faced with the same challenge.
โThe recent increase in the price of petrol will impact on transportation, and just like every other thing, it is a ripple effect.
โIt is going to affect food prices, tuition fees, everything will go up,โ Eze said.
According to him,ย the parents will experience a tough time in the next few days when students and pupils go back to school.
โTo be honest, we are not looking forward to those tough days. We just hope that something happens urgently,โ he said.
Jessica Nana, a mother of two, decried the high cost of preparing her children for school.
โThings are very hard. My children are going to resume school next week, and I can not boast of getting everything they need,โ she said.
Nana noted that the cost of school fees and transportation had surged, making it harder for parents to cope.
โThe bus fare is now very high. We are hoping that the price of things will come down. If not, it is going to affect school resumption because everything has tripled.
โWe are praying and hoping that things will get better,โ she said.
Mr Joseph Okoh, a businessman, said that he had to move his children to a cheaper school that was affordable for him.
โI have to take this decision so that I can meet up with other essentials of life that have also doubled.
โThe cost of transportation and feeding alone is high. It is almost impossible to provide proper meals these days.
โThings are more expensive than before,ย and I only hope that things will get better soon,โ Okoh said.
Mrs Funmilayo Ade, a resident of Nyanya, said that the financial burden on parents was now more pronounced.
โIt has been hard for us because no matter how much we save, it is never enough.
โWe are hoping to get enough money to buy necessary things for schoolsโ resumption and then another increase in fuel price which further worsened the situation,โ she said.
Ade appealed to the Federal Government to look into the fuel price, which had a multiplier effect on the economy, and act on it to saveย Nigerians.
NAN.
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