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Hardship: Labour pushes for minimum wage increase in 2025

The Organised Labour says it is pushing for an annual increase to the N70,000 minimum wage paid to workers in Nigeria.

Labour said it is important that the minimum wage paid to workers reflects a yearly inflation rise.

“What we are pushing on for Labour is that instead of you (the government) waiting for five years to increase the minimum wage, you will now look at the inflation of the last five years and try to make some adjustments; why can’t we reflect the inflation on an annual basis?” TUC boss Festus Osifo said on Channels Television’s Politics Today.

The President of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) said members of the organization and their colleagues in the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) had begun talks about this.

“For example, we have entered January 2025; by the 15th of January 2025, the National Bureau of Statistics is going to release the inflation figure for December,” he explained.

“So, what we are pushing for as Labour is that, if, for example, the inflation figure is 35 percent, apply that 35 percent to the ₦70,000 minimum wage to reflect the actual value.

“When we get to 2026, you will also do similar application. That is actually what we are pushing. We shouldn’t be waiting for five years.

“In the new Act, now is three years to make those adjustments, but we could be doing them systemically by applying the inflation as of December of the preceding year to what the minimum wage is.

“This is part of the position we can also canvass this year. We started the conversation last year but will continue in 2025.”

In July 2024, after months of protracted talks, the Federal Government and labour unions reached a consensus figure of ₦70,000 minimum wage, which President Bola Tinubu later approved.

The increase came five years after the last review pegged it at ₦30,000. However, with the astronomic rise in the cost of living, attributed to a more than quadruple hike in energy costs and petrol subsidy removal, labour unions have argued that ₦70,000 cannot take any worker home and thus demanded a decent living wage.

 

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