Moghalu says N18,000 is 'poverty wage' for Nigerian workers
He believes workers deserve more than they're getting from the government as minimum wage.
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While speaking during an interview with Pulse on Monday, November 19, 2018, the former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said workers deserve more than they're getting from the government as minimum wage.
"N18,000 is a poverty wage. You can't be paying people less than $2 a day and you call yourself a government," he said.
When asked how much he would recommend as national minimum wage, Moghalu proposed "around N36,000 but not more than N40,000".
Last week, the Nigeria Governors' Forum (NGF) disclosed that states would have to downsize the workforce nationwide to be able to afford the N30,000 national minimum wage as proposed by organised labour.
President Muhammadu Buharireceived the recommendation of the tripartite committee he had set up last year to propose a minimum wage. The president expressed his commitment towards getting the recommendation passed by the National Assembly as soon as possible, with the new wage pegged at N30,000.
Before the proposed N30,000 was presented to the president, state governors had insisted they could only increase the minimum wage, currently pegged at N18,000, to N22,500.
Moghalu said the governors can afford to pay workers if they cut down on the excessive cost of running government for their own comfort.
He said, "They have all the money for security votes. Many of the governors have about 500 special assistants and another several hundred special assistants. Isn't that money maintaining them? Is that useful expenditure? That's just money being used to maintain political cronies when people who are poor, civil servants, are not getting a minimum wage."
2019 presidential election
The 2019 presidential election, scheduled for February 16, 2019, is billed to be closely-fought between President Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, of the People's Democratic Party (PDP).
Alongside Moghalu in the chasing pack is Donald Duke of the Social Democratic Party (SDP), Oby Ezekwesili of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN), Fela Durotoye of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN), and Omoyele Sowore of the African Action Congress (AAC).
Others are Tope Fasua of the Abundance Nigeria Renewal Party (ANRP), Eunice Atuejide of the National Interest Party (NIP), Olusegun Mimiko of the Zenith Labour Party (ZLP), Adesina Fagbenro-Byron of the Kowa Party (KP), Chike Ukaegbu of the Advanced Allied Party (AAP), Hamza Al-Mustapha of the People's Party of Nigeria (PPN), Obadiah Mailafia of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), and many more.
79 candidates will contest in the election, the highest number ever in Nigeria's electoral history.
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