Minimum Wage Implementation: How Tinubu Govt Reneged On Its Promise
The decision of the Committee on Consequential Adjustments in Salaries for civil servants to backdate the implementation of the new minimum wage to July 29, 2024, has been condemned by the Labour unions.
Osun Defender reports that the Committee made the agreement on Friday at a meeting in Abuja.
According to a Memorandum of Understanding issued at the end of the meeting, the Committee also recommended that the wage award, which was discontinued by the government, should also be paid up till July 28, 2024.
The Committee headed by the Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Didi Walson-Jack noted that the government took note of the economic situation in the country before it took its decisions.
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โThe Committee held four meetings and considered all presentations by the Federal Government and Trade Union Sides. It also considered the economic situation and ability of the Federal Government to pay and sustain any consequential adjustment in salaries arising from the implementation of the National Minimum Wage (Amendment) Act, 2024, as well as the effect on other employers.โ
The MOU further recommended that โThe NSIWC will generate the appropriate salary templates for other consolidated salary structures for implementation: that the effective date of the implementation should be 29th July 2024, that the payment of the wage award issued vide NS/WC Circular SWC.04/T/33 dated 19th October 2023 should continue to be paid until 28th July 2024.
โThat the Federal Government should take appropriate measures to alleviate the plight of Federal workers as a result of the recent increase in PMS, including the consideration of tax waivers and other incentives; and that the NSIWC in collaboration with other stakeholders should commence monitoring of the implementation in line with the provisions of the Act.โ
But reacting in an interview with Saturday PUNCH, the Head of Information of the Nigerian Labour Congress, Benson Upah, faulted the decision of the government, describing it as unacceptable.
โThe backdating to July is not fair. It is not acceptable,โ he said.
Also, the National Vice President of the Trade Union Congress, Timmy Etim, criticised the governmentโs move.
Etim noted that since the Minister of State for Labour, Nkiruka Onyejeocha, had told workers on May Day that the new minimum wage would take effect in May, it was unfair for the government to renege on the promise.
โThe Minister of State for Labour, during the May Day, said that the payment of the new national minimum wage would take effect from May 1st. I am surprised if they have changed and I donโt know the parameter they used for the change. But it will be unfair for the government to do that, taking cognizance of the socio-economic challenges.
โI think the government should walk the talk. If they say that the effective day is May, I believe that should have been effected. Even when they had deviated from May, it should have been from the date of which the Act was signed into law. But be that as it may, even the N35,000 should be applied till the effective date. If that is considered, I think it is reasonable,โ Etim stated.