Industrial crisis looms over minimum wage

The Joint National Public Service Negotiating Council (JNPSNC) has said on Tuesday that the implementation of the new minimum wage with adequate consequential adjustments remains the only way to avoid industrial crisis.

The council impelled Nigerians to appeal and call on the Federal Government to act fast to avoid the looming unrest.

This call was made yesterday by the organised labour under the platform of the Trade Union Side (TUS) of the council over the inability of its negotiating team to reach an agreement with the government over non-implementation of new minimum wage.

TUS Acting Chairman Anchaver Simon and Secretary Alade Lawal said in a statement that efforts by the unions to persuade the government to implement the new minimum wage with appropriate consequential adjustment had proved abortive.

They said that the TUS had given the government enough time to come to term with the workers’ demand to avoid calling out its members for strike.

The officials said the union would give no further notice to the government before public servants in the state commence strike over the non-implementation of the new minimum wage and appropriate consequential adjustment.

They said: “It has become imperative to alert the general public that all efforts by the Trade Unions to persuade the government to implement the new N30,000 monthly National Minimum Wage signed into Law by President Muhammadu Buhari on April 18, 2019 with appropriate consequential adjustment, had been frustrated by government.”

They said that the Consequential Adjustment Committee had on September 3 agreed that the proposal of the TUS be forwarded to President Muhammadu Buhari to see labour’s patriotic position and approve appropriate consequential adjustment accordingly.

The unionists said: “When the meeting reconvened on September 16, 2019 to get a feedback on the expected approval from the President, government officials brought a fresh proposal of 11 per cent pay rise for officers on Grade Levels 07 to 14, instead of the earlier position of 10 per cent and 6.5 per cent for those on grade levels 15 to 17 instead of the former 5.5 per cent.

“As we write, Nigeria is rated the poorest country in the whole world and yet, government is refusing to implement a minimum wage for Nigerian workers to lift millions of citizens out of poverty.”

The TUS stated that the Trade Union Congress (TUC) and the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) had been briefed on the breakdown of negotiation in respect of consequential adjustment arising from the new N30,000 monthly National Minimum Wage.

The new minimum wage bill was signed into law by the President on April 18.

But deliberations continued as the issue of relativity/consequential adjustment of salaries still persisted.

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