Mary Akanbi
5th July, 2024
Biodun Oyebanji has said that governors are not against approval of a living wage for Nigerian workers Governor Oyebanji noted that what Nigerian governors are clamouring for is fiscal federalism that would culminate in the ability of individual states to pay The Ekiti governor stated that it is incumbent on individual states to determine what they can afford.
Biodun Oyebanji, the governor of Ekiti, has said only an increased allocation can enable state governments to pay the new minimum wage. Speaking in Ado Ekiti on Wednesday, July 3, during the 7th quadrennial delegates’ conference of the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN), Oyebanji stated that each state was interested in determining what it could afford so that it would not end up laying off staff.
The Ekiti governor said: “No governor wants to retrench, if there is a minimum wage today without a concurrent increment in what we are earning, no state can pay. “That is the conversation we are having – that, look, we want to give you a living wage, but we must look at what comes to the states and whatever is in the best interest of the states and the workers, we will do.” Recently, the organised labour has been demanding an increase in minimum wage of N30,000 owing to the rising inflation that has pushed food prices up. While the federal government has offered to pay N62,000, labour unions have insisted on N250,000.