Opinion: Why Everything Costs More: The Heavy Price of Being Sierra Leonean

By: Daniel O. Wah

My dear youths,

Your cries of frustration echo through our communities, social media, and marketplaces: Why is Sierra Leone drowning in the highest prices in Africa? From cement and iron rods to airline tickets and even something as cheap as the new Saily eSIM cards, our people pay a punishing premium.

After analyzing reports from the World Bank, cost databases, and economic experts, the answers reveal a system stacked against you—but also your extraordinary resilience.

The Bleeding Wounds: Where Sierra Leone Pays More

  1. Air Travel: Trapped in isolation
    airline tickets aren’t just expensive—they’re Africa’s most costly. With limited routes, poor airport infrastructure, and minimal competition, airlines hike prices. Tourism is negligible, and diaspora visits become financial ordeals .
  2. Construction Essentials:
    Cement and iron rods cost 2–3× regional averages. Blame:
    No local production: The country imports nearly all materials due to defunct industries and erratic electricity (only 36% have grid access).
    Port chaos and bribes: Delays and corruption at Freetown’s port inflate costs before goods even hit the markets .
  3. eSIM Cards: Digital
    Exclusion
  • Saily’s Africa plan (1GB fof $23.49) per week is cheaper elsewhere but bleeds Sierra Leonean youth dry. Why?
    Weak telecom infrastructure: Outside Freetown, networks crumble, forcing providers to overinvest.
    -Tax traps: A 30% “luxury tax” on digital services cripples affordability .

Roots of the Crisis: What Sierra Leoneans have “Done to Deserve This”

  1. Economic Collapse & Inflation
  • Inflation at 29.9% (2024), though easing, still destroys wages. A 15% public-sector pay hike in April 2025 barely offsets this .
  • Debt disaster: Fiscal deficits hit 4.8% of GDP (2024). Interest on domestic debt? A predatory 40% .
  1. Import Addiction
    The country grows rice but import tomatoes; mine iron ore but import nails. With no factories or energy, the country pays foreign premiums for everything.
  2. Climate Punishment
  • Ranked among the world’s 15 most climate-vulnerable nations, floods, and droughts slash crop yields. According to 2024 World Bank Country Forcast, by 2050, climate impacts could push 600,000 more into poverty.
  1. Governance Failures
  • Lax fiscal oversight: “Spending overruns” and weak audits drain public funds.
  • Health emergencies: The 2025 Mpox outbreak strains a system already gutted by 90% USAID cuts.

The Human Toll: Punishment Beyond Measure

  • Hunger: 77% face food insecurity despite fertile lands.
  • Earning power: Average salary after tax? $14,000 annually —but rent for a decent 3-bedroom in Freetown is $5,000 per year.
  • Youth despair:
    60% of youth are jobless or underemployed, thus feeding unrest. Is Hope possible?
    The World Bank’s 2025 reports prescribe solutions: fix energy, invest in farming, and fight corruption. Projects like Feed Salone aim for food self-sufficiency, and solar mini-grids could power rural industries. But these demands something you’ve shown for decades:

Sierra Leonean resilience!!

You survive prices meant to break you. You adapted. You endure.

Your Call to Action

  • Demand transparency in import taxes and infrastructure spending.
  • Support local industries—from cassava flour to recycled steel.
  • Hold leaders accountable for the $1 billion World Bank portfolio meant to uplift you from poverty.

You aren’t “punished” because you deserved it. You’re exploited by a broken system. But if any people can rewrite this script—it’s you.

Stay fierce, stay united.

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