Chris Ngige, Nigeria’s Minister of Labour and Employment has said the new minimum wage structure will not come into place any time soon.
TheNewsGuru (TNG) reports the Minister made this known while speaking with reporters in Anambra State.
According to Ngige, State Governors are yet to submit their proposal on the new wage system and that without a proposal from the governors, there cannot be an agreement on a new wage structure.
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) had proposed a minimum wage of N56,000, but employers under the umbrella of the Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association rejected the proposal.
Ngige, the deputy chairman of the 30-man Tripartite Committee on the minimum wage set up by President Muhammadu Buhari last November said that although the Tripartite Commmitte would conclude its assignment this month, the delay by the governors to submit their proposal would halt the action.
“I am the deputy chairman (of the committee); I drive it. We have a timetable and we will finish everything about it this end of August, but it is not attainable anymore because even in the committee we have not all finished dotting all the i’s and agreeing on a figure
“We couldn’t agree on a figure because of two reasons, partly the state governors have not come up with a figure and the state governors are a critical constituent of this discussion. They have six governors in the committee, one from each geo-political zone
“So the Governors Forum has not come up with their figure. They say they are still working on it. That was the last submission they made to us and the federal government team. We are working through the Economic management team.
“The Economic management team dictates the economy of the country and they will now take whatever the governors say and fine-tune with that of the federal government, so that is where we are.
“The national minimum wage tripartite committee is still at work, and is until it brings out its figures, brings out its recommendations pertaining to the national minimum wage. It is only after that that a Bill can be sent to the National Assembly for processing and be sent to Mr. President for assent and for it to become a National Minimum Wage Act,” he said.