Friday, May 2, 2025 - The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) leaders have called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu's federal government to urgently review the N70,000 minimum wage as the country celebrates May Day 2025.
The cost of living has been astronomical since the removal
of the petrol subsidy on May 29, 2023.
Labour leaders, in an interview with The PUNCH, said the
Nigerian worker had been crippled by the high cost of prices and soaring
inflation, which they added, made the N70,000 minimum wage inconsequential.
The Bayelsa State Chairman of the Trade Union Congress,
Comrade Julius Laye, said the Nigerian worker was worse off under the President
Bola Tinubu administration than ever before.
He listed several factors that had negatively impacted
workers, which he said, made the new minimum wage grossly inadequate.
Laye said, “You know that the government introduced several
taxes, and the hike in tariffs has impacted the workers negatively. The
economic policies and the removal of subsidies have led to hyperinflation, so
the minimum wage has become inadequate.
“Even the minimum wage is not enough to cover Medicare.
Incidentally, they have money to fly out to seek better medical attention, but
the Nigerian workers do not have the means to do so.
“We are worse off in this administration than we had ever
been at any other time.”
In Ebonyi, the state Chairman of the NLC, Prof. Oguguo Egwu,
and his TUC counterpart, Comrade Igwe Chidi, expressed displeasure over the
continuous economic hardship faced by workers in the state.
They said Nigerian workers were looking forward to an
adjustment of the National Minimum Wage Act, which provided a review every
three years since the current N70,000 implemented by Governor Francis Nwifuru
was no longer enough to meet their needs.
Egwu, who disclosed the theme of this year’s Workers Day
celebration as ‘Reclaiming a civic space amid economic hardship’, said the
suffering in the country was unprecedented.
“It’s a day to celebrate our workers, it’s a day we honour
our past heroes, those who have struggled for the workers in the world to
emancipate them from the shackles of the leaders. The good thing about this
year’s celebration is that we will give awards to deserving Ebonyi workers who
posted outstanding performances in service, while also maintaining the code of
the civil service.
“We have the opportunity to bring veterans to educate them
on the theme of this year’s celebration. The hardship in Nigeria, not just in
Ebonyi State, is unprecedented. If you look into the face of a typical Nigerian
worker, it is filled with wrinkles, darkened, deep and of course every face of
a typical Nigerian worker tells the story of a multi-dimensional poverty.”
Chidi added, “Workers are facing different challenges. The
economy is very harsh, not only on the workers but on Nigerians. The new
minimum wage was just implemented in the state but it is no longer significant
to the workers. If you go to the market, that N70, 000 cannot buy you
anything.”
The Niger State Chairman, TUC, Ibrahim Gana, blamed the
Federal Government for the pathetic state of workers, adding that the soaring
inflation had destroyed the gains the little increase in the minimum wage
brought to the workers.
“The situation of workers is pathetic. The electricity tariff, the pump
price of petrol, the transportation and every other thing has taken all the
minimum wage again. The multiplying effects of these are weighing on the
workers. It’s just as if we are not even working. You collect your salary as if
you didn’t even get it and then coupled with all the hardship, all the
inflation,” Gana said.
“We never knew the Federal Government could push up the cost of living
like this. You can’t afford three meals a day, you can’t take a bag of rice
home, and you can’t do anything with the money. So, that is where we are as
workers. That is the sorry situation we find ourselves in,” Gana said.
On who to blame, he added, “Who else is the head of the ruling government,
which is responsible for these problems? Who do you want us to blame? It is the
Tunubu government. If they had the workers’ interest at heart, they would have
done something about the devaluation of the naira.”
Lagos State Chairman of the NLC, Funmi Sessi, also expressed deep concern
over the rising cost of living, deteriorating public services, and the lack of
effective government action.
“This year, we have witnessed hardship in the civic space like never
before. “Are we talking about accommodation, transportation, healthcare,
education, or even feeding? Prices keep rising, and nothing is being done to
ease the pain,” she said.
Ogun state TUC boss Akeem Lasisi also added that there was “little to
celebrate” despite the approved N70,000 minimum wage last year.
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