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Minimum Wage Was More Than $125 In 1981, Today It Is Less Than $60 - NLC President, Ayuba Wabba

Thompson Nsisongabasi

May 03, 2021

The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) has taken a swipe at Nigerian politicians for being insensitive to the plights of the workers in the country.

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Speaking during an interview on Channels Television's , NLC President, Ayuba Wabba said the minimum wage in 1981 was more than $125, lamenting that it is currently less than $60.

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"The first minimum wage in 1981by Shagari was more than $125. Today it is less than $60 because of the dwindling fortune of our economy,ÔÇØ he said.

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"Instead of even appreciating, celebrating and paying workers, this crop of politicians, those that are not paying are not people that mean well for Nigerians and our system.ÔÇØ

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The NLC leader said the current index in Nigeria cannot sustain an average worker, noting that a bag of rice costs N30,000.

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While noting that workers are in a 'very sorry situation', Wabba said some state governments do not see the welfare of their workers as a priority.

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On the minimum wage, the labour leader threatened a shutdown in states where governors are yet to implement the policy.

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He added, "Today, more than one-third of the states are not paying. Some actually implemented for Levels 1-6. It is only about lack of resources, it is about whether they are committed to workers' welfare.

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"If not, how can a state like Rivers be talking about workers' welfare up till now. This is the real issue. Those governors that are good, are not in the same category.

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Wabba's remarks come few hours after the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, faulted governors yet to pay the new minimum wage to workers in their states.

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Ngige who spoke during an interview on Channels Television's Sunday Politics, said that any employer paying its employee below N30,000 was doing so in contravention of the law.

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"If you read the Act well, you will see the applicability of the Act. The applicability is that all parts of the Federation (Section II); Section III also says N30,000 shall be paid, the operating word is shall.

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"It does not give room for picking and choosing, it is a must. The state governors that are not paying are breaching the law of the land,ÔÇØ the minister said.

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President Muhammadu Buhari signed the Minimum Wage Repeal and Re-Enactment Act, 2019 into law on April 18, 2019.

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— Thompson Nsisongabasi

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