NLC has threatened to paralyse economic activities,asked FG to review minimum wage.




The organised labour has threatened to paralyse economic activities if the Federal Government does not initiate the process to review workers minimum wage.

The National Union of Textile Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria, an affiliate member of the Nigeria Labour Congress, issued the threat in Kaduna on Thursday, May 11.
It said workers are hungry and angry.
The union called on the Government to urgently constitute a committee on the review of the current national minimum wage.
It also called on NLC and TUC to make urgent case for workers' control of the country’s pension industry.
The union said that pension fund is workers' capital and should not be a play-ground to reward failed politicians.
Speaking to newsmen on Thursday, Comrade Issa Aremu, President IndustriALL Global Union, said a national industrial crisis looms if the Federal Government does not act accordingly.
Aremu said, "As demonstrated by workers during the May Day in Abuja, Nigeria risks national industrial crisis except governments at all levels give due attention to the critical issue of compensation of workers. Hungry workers are legitimately angry workers. Nigerian workers are not only hungry but legitimately angry.
"We commend both the Senate and the House of Representatives for their respective facilitating roles to address the current issue of national minimum wage.  However, the responsibility lies squarely with President Muhammadu Buhari ably being represented by Vice President Osinbajo.
"National Minimum Wage (Amendment) Act 2011 which offers the current N18,000 was for a 5-year cycle due for review in 2015. The five-year time limit was to avoid minimum wage stagnation and attendant seemingly increases that follow. In UK minimum wage is reviewed yearly. Today it is £7.5 per hour, about N37,000 per day!
"Long before the current recession, Nigeria workers have long been in depression. With Naira devaluation and high inflation, 2010 negotiated national minimum wage of N18,000 which was about $120 in 2010 has fallen to below $50 in 2017 worsening income poverty. Nigeria cannot get out of recession with poorly paid work-force."
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