Congress …Foresees Nigeria as dumping nation with AFCFTA agreement
The
Trade Union Congress (TUC) has said it no longer trusts the Federal
Government’s commitment to the implementation of N30,000 as minimum wage
for Nigerian workers.
Besides, the union said with the signing
of the African Continental Trade Area (AFCFTA) by President Muhammadu
Buhari recently, Nigeria may become a dumping ground of foreign goods.
The union’s President, Mr. Quadri Olaleye, who noted this in Lagos at
the weekend said the union was disturbed that the enthusiasm that
greeted the signing into law of the new national minimum wage of N30,000
was fast turning into a nightmare.
Mr. Olaleye said, “From the
look of things, it appears the Federal Government is not committed to
implementing the new minimum wage arrangement going by the way its
representatives in the committee set up to negotiate the consequential
adjustment arising from the new minimum wage are handling the
negotiation. The organised labour has been considerate by lowering its
initial demand for increasing the salaries of officers on Grade Level
(GL) 07 to 17 by 66.66 per cent as the rate at which the minimum wage
was increased, yet, the government side is only offering 9.5 per cent
for GL 07 to 14 officers and five per cent to those on GL 15 to 17.”
He
said the organised labour had thought that the issue of consequential
adjustment would be negotiated openly and in the spirit of collective
bargaining which, according to him, unfortunately, had not happened.
He further said, “As it stands now, we may be forced to go to the
trenches. We sincerely hope that the government will act fast and direct
its representatives to return to the negotiation table with a more
realistic mandate that will be beneficial to workers who have had to
wait for almost a decade to get something meaningful added to their
emoluments.” On AFCFTA, Olaleye noted that no serious nation signed such
agreement and went to sleep, stressing that Nigeria’s gain of the
treaty was the ability to push its goods across borders.
“As a
congress, we have our concerns over the agreement. We have the
population, but lack the basic infrastructure that is capable of making
our industries strive. The agreement will further kill the economy as we
remain a dumping nation if we continue to be a consumer nation. Our
gains essentially depend on our ability to push our goods across
borders. The energy sector has to be improved upon to boost productivity
and lower cost of production, and also source raw materials locally. We
must make free trade agreement serve our interest,” he said. Olaleye
also said urged the Federal Government to encourage more local investors
in the aviation sector, emphasising that with the continuous opening of
major airports to foreign airlines, capital flight and joblessness were
inevitable. Related May Day: Labour demands immediate payment of
N30,000 new minimum wage Oyo govt., labour meet over N30,000 minimum
wage As January 23
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