How African households and SMEs can protect purchasing power, keep cash stable, and make smarter decisions when prices rise fast.
Five moves to survive and adapt
High inflation is now a daily reality in many African markets. Prices change quickly, suppliers adjust without warning, and customers delay spending. The goal is not to eliminate inflation. The goal is to stay steady inside it.
Inflation hurts most when a business reacts late. Resilience comes from clear routines that reduce surprises and protect cash.
When prices move fast, small weekly decisions beat big yearly plans. Track your cash and costs often, then adjust early.
Here are five moves that help SMEs and households cope better.
- See your cash weekly. Track inflows, outflows, and the next 8 weeks, even in a simple sheet.
- Reprice with discipline. Review prices and margins monthly, not once a year.
- Buy smart, not big. Stock only what turns fast, negotiate smaller but more frequent orders.
- Separate essentials from extras. Freeze non critical spending until margins recover.
- Protect your working capital. Push for quicker collections and shorter credit terms with clients.
These actions reduce the panic that inflation creates. Over time, they keep the business in control even when the market is not.
Practical examples show the difference. A retailer who checks margins weekly will adjust prices before losses build. A logistics SME that renegotiates fuel clauses early avoids sudden cash gaps. A small manufacturer that buys inputs in shorter cycles avoids locking cash in slow stock.