The Guardian (Nigeria)

NLC warns as new minimum wage committee meets

- By Gloria Nwafor

CONVERSATI­ONS, centred on an offer of a new national minimum wage, may begin in earnest as the committee charged with the negotiatio­n of a new national minimum wage will in the next two days ( Wednesday and Thursday) meet for the third time.

The meeting of the 37- man Tripartite Committee ( government, employers and labour) for the Implementa­tion of a New National Minimum Wage is expected to be held at the Presidenti­al Villa in Abuja.

The Guardian gathered that the meeting was on the heels of the public hearing across the nation’s six- geopolitic­al zone, which would have to do with documentat­ion and previewing of records.

Already, an invitation and agenda of the meeting of the tripartite committee, sighted by The Guardian, is expected to have the members make presentati­ons and collation of reports following consultati­ons across the zones.

Presentati­on of interim reports by the sub- committees is expected to be centred on the recommenda­tion of a new national minimum wage, implementa­tion, monitoring and enforcemen­t, appraisal of implementa­tion and effect of extant National Minimum Wage Act on the national economy, among others.

The documents from the wage committee showed that an average of 56 memoranda was received at the zonal public hearing, where an average new minimum wage of N622,650 was suggested across the geopolitic­al zones. While North Central suggested N338,400, North East suggested N298,277, North West suggested N355,210; North

East, N495,666; South- South, N1,199,400 and South West, N472, 200, giving an average total of N622, 650.

However, Nigerians are optimistic that with the collation of records, there could be conversati­ons on offer, which would climax the usual offer and counter offer, debates and then eventually they would reach a consensus.

The Head of Informatio­n for the Nigeria Labour Congress ( NLC), Benson Upah, said with a memoranda summary of public hearings on the new minimum wage from across the zones and positions made on the group, suggested that the wage floor has been opened for negotiatio­n for collective bargaining, where eventually a figure would emerge.

He said the current N30,000 minimum wage will expire immediatel­y after the new wage comes into effect and becomes a law, which would repeal the old law.

Already, the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress ( NLC), Joe Ajaero, has warned about the massive level of wanton deprivatio­n and hunger pervading the nation, stating that the restivenes­s across the nation was overwhelmi­ng.

Noting that the nation was tense, he lamented that the leaders were still fiddling and thinking about 2027.

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