By Chijioke Jannah
Members of the House of
Representatives on Thursday faulted the Council of State for approving
N27,000 as the new minimum wage when the agreement reached by the
government, organised labour and the private sector was N30,000.
The
lawmakers, therefore, expressed their readiness to adopt the N30,000
proposed by the tripartite committee, whose report was presented to
President Muhammadu Buhari.
At the plenary on Thursday, the
Speaker, Mr. Yakubu Dogara, had read a letter by President Buhari to the
legislature, seeking an amendment to the Minimum Wage Act 1981, to
reflect a new minimum wage of N27,000.
The President said the amount was proposed by the tripartite committee and ratified by the Council of State.
However,
several members of the Green Chamber criticised the Council of State
for its alleged unconstitutional approval of a wage for Nigerian
workers.
The Deputy Chief Whip, Mr. Pally Iriase, called for the approval of N30,000 wage for workers.
He
said in part, “The Nigerian worker earns too much less. Go to the
market, because of the noise of N30,000, go and price the items today.
But now, it is N27,000.
“This bill must be dealt with in
accordance with what the tripartite committee came up with. Not even Mr.
President himself could deny what the tripartite committee presented.”
While
saying that “the revenue allocation formula is overdue for a review,
the lawmaker charged his colleagues to “stand up for once” in defence of
workers.
“Mr. Speaker, N30,000 will be what this House will
pass. This House should pass N30,000 instead of this rigmarole,” Iriase
stated.
Similarly, another lawmaker, Mr. Oluwole Oke, said, “I
want to observe that no Nigerian worker earns a minimum wage. I’ve tried
to compare the minimum wage here with other climes and arrived at an
average of N900, assuming the worker works for eight hours. The N27,000
is grossly inadequate.”
Also, Mr. Chika Adamu, who noted that an
increase in the minimum wage was a welcome development, said, “The
N27,000 arrived at is grossly inadequate.”
According to him, the
economic indices and the imminent rise in the prices of commodities as
well as the move by the Federal Government to impose new taxes as part
of its revenue drive, would not make a N27,000 wage realistic.
“This
money is grossly inadequate. By the economic indices that we have on
the ground, this money will have no value by the end of the year,” Adamu
stated.
Source:- Dailypostng
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