minimum wage

MINIMUM WAGE: WE CAN ONLY PAY N22,500, SAY GOVERNORS

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The Governors under the ageis of the Nigeria Governors forum(NGF) have agreed to  pay N22,500 as minimum wage which is a difference of N7,500 from the N30,000 being requested by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).

According to Abdulaziz Yari, governor of Zamfara and chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), he and his colleagues have agreed to pay N22,500 to workers.

Yari explained that the acceptable minimum wage “must be done in such a way that total personnel cost does not exceed 50 percent of the revenue available to each state.”

The governor said the forum is more concerned with the development in infrastructure, health, educational sectors.

“The welfare of all Nigerians is our ultimate concern. In all our States, we are concerned about the deteriorating economic situation experienced by the vulnerable segment of our population,” Yari said.

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“In agreeing to a National Minimum Wage however, the Forum is even more concerned about development, particularly in the health, education and infrastructure spheres.

“It is therefore our considered position that since the percentage of salaried workers is not more than 5 percent of the total working population, our position must not just reflect a figure, but also a sustainable strategy based on ability and capacity to pay, as well as reflective of all our developmental needs in each state.

“Afterall, Section 3 of the National Salaries Income and Wages Commission Act provides that ‘the Commission shall recommend a proposition of income growth which should be initiated for wage increase and also examined the salary structure in public and private sector with reasonable features of relativity and maximum levels which are in consonance with the national economy.

“It is in this sense that we feel strongly that our acceptable minimum wage must be done in such a way that total personnel cost does not exceed 50 percent of the revenue available to each State.

“Governors therefore agreed to pay a national minimum wage of N22,500.”

Organised labour had demanded an upward raise of the minimum wage from N18,000 to N30,000, an amount the federal government said was not feasible.

The federal government, had instead, proposed 24,000. The state governments had earlier suggested N20,000 but labour rejected both proposals.

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On Monday, the meeting the federal government conveyed to discuss new minimum wage ended on an inconclusive note.

Governors who were present at the meeting were those of Adamawa, Ebonyi, Edo, Ekiti, Imo, Kebbi, Lagos, Niger, Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Oyo, Plateau and Zamfara.Also present were deputy governors of Benue and Nasarawa States.

In a reverse return, the Benue state governor, Samuel Ortom, has agreed to pay the agreed minimum wage by NLC, TUC. He said this on Tuesday in Makurdi, Benue capital, when members of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Trade Union Congress (TUC), and other unions visited him to demand the upward review of wages.

Minimum Wage: Is Governor Obiano Really Paying?

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Ortom, who was represented by his chief of staff, Terwase Orbunde, said he was not against the upward review of workers’ minimum wages “in spite of the current economic challenges bedevilling the country”.

“I will work in line with the outcome of the new minimum wage committee. I am known for championing improved welfare for workers. I did it when I was the chairman of Guma local government area,” he said.

“When I came on board as governor, primary school teachers were not receiving the N18,000.00 minimum wage. I stepped up their salaries without waiting for them to mount pressure on me to do so. “I wanted them to be at par with other civil servants in the state. They did not march in protest before I increased their salaries. I am not against a better life for workers.”

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