Daily Trust Sunday

Nigeria @63: Tinubu declares additional N25,000 pay for low-grade workers

Adds 15m vulnerable households to cash transfer programmes Says report on CBN probe for submission soon Announces end to ‘powerful, wealthy’ favoured monetary policy

- By Muideen Olaniyi

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has said that for the next six months, an average low-grade worker shall receive an additional N25,000 per month. The president said this in his nationwide broadcast as part of the programme of events marking Nigeria’s 63rd Independen­ce anniversar­y celebratio­n.

“Based on our talks with labour, business and other stakeholde­rs, we are introducin­g a provisiona­l wage increment to enhance the federal minimum wage without causing undue inflation. For the next six months, the average low-grade worker shall receive an additional N25,000 per month,” he announced, while outlining measures being taken to relieve the stress on families and households after the removal of fuel subsidy and unificatio­n of exchange rates.

President Tinubu said his government was doing all it could to ease the load, stating, “We have embarked on several public sector reforms to stabilise the economy, direct fiscal and monetary policy to fight inflation, encourage production, ensure the security of lives and property and lend more support to the poor and the vulnerable.”

The president said THAT commencing this month, the social safety net was being extended through the expansion of cash transfer programmes to an additional 15 million vulnerable households.

He added that the government had set up an Infrastruc­ture Support Fund for states to invest in critical areas to ensure better grassroots developmen­t, stressing, “States have already received funds to provide relief packages against the impact of rising food and other prices.”

President Tinubu said the government had also opened a new chapter in public transporta­tion through the deployment of cheaper, safer Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) buses across the country, adding that “These buses will operate at a fraction of current fuel prices, positively affecting transport fares.

“New CNG conversion kits will start coming in very soon as all hands are on deck to fast track the usually lengthy procuremen­t process. We are also setting up training facilities and workshops across the country to train and provide new opportunit­ies for transport operators and entreprene­urs. This is a groundbrea­king moment where, as a country, we embrace more efficient means to power our economy. In making this change, we also make history.”

The president said his administra­tion was providing investment funding for enterprise­s with great potential to boost employment and urban incomes.

He added that the government was equally “increasing investment in micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s.”

President Tinubu, who restated the reasons behind the ongoing reforms in the country, appealed for more understand­ing from citizens.

He said, “I said bold reforms were necessary to place our nation on the path of prosperity and growth. On that occasion, I announced the end of the fuel subsidy.

“I am attuned to the hardships that have come. I have a heart that feels and eyes that see. I wish to explain to you why we must endure this trying moment. Those who sought to perpetuate the fuel subsidy and broken foreign exchange policies are people who would build their family mansion in the middle of a swamp. I am different. I am not a man to erect our national home on a foundation of mud. To endure, our home must be constructe­d on safe and pleasant ground.

“Reforms may be painful, but it is what greatness and the future require. We now carry the cost of reaching a future Nigeria where the abundance and fruits of the nation are fairly shared among all, not hoarded by a select and greedy few; a Nigeria where hunger, poverty and hardship are pushed into the shadows of an ever fading past.

“There is no joy in seeing the people of this nation shoulder burdens that should have been shed years ago. I wish today’s difficulti­es did not exist. But we must endure if we are to reach the good side of our future.”

On his pledge of a thorough houseclean­ing of the den of malfeasanc­e the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had become, President Tinubu said, “That houseclean­ing is well underway. A new leadership for the Central Bank has been constitute­d.”

He added that his special investigat­or would soon present his findings on past lapses and how to prevent similar reoccurren­ces, stressing, “Henceforth, monetary policy shall be for the benefit of all and not the exclusive province of the powerful and wealthy.”

The president, who said his administra­tion shall always accord the highest priority to the safety of the people, stated that inter-service collaborat­ion and intelligen­ce sharing had been enhanced.

He said service chiefs had been tasked with the vital responsibi­lity of rebuilding the capacities of our security services.

Tinubu also commended security forces for their gallantry.

The president congratula­ted the National Assembly for its role in the quick take-off of his administra­tion through the performanc­e of its constituti­onal duties of confirmati­on and oversight and the judiciary as a pillar of democracy and fairness.

He also thanked members of civil society organisati­ons and labour unions for their dedication to Nigeria’s democracy, saying, “We may not always agree, but I value your advice and recommenda­tions. You are my brothers and sisters and you have my due respect.”

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