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June 18, 2024

Fashola: NASS can only legislate on minimum wage, not salaries

Fashola calls for collaboration between government, social clubs for development

File: Fashola

Former minister of works and housing, Babatunde Fashola says the National Assembly can only enact laws on minimum wage for workers and not their salaries.

In an article entitled ‘Minimum Wage Review – My Takeaway’, Fashola said the constitution only stipulates legislation; what is in the exclusive-legislative list is the country’s minimum wage.

According to him, any person earning a salary is paid a fixed amount over a period of time, while a person earning a wage is paid by the hour.

Recall that organised labour and Federal Government are yet to agree on a new minimum wage from the current N30,000. While the federal government has offered to pay N62,000, organised labour has insisted on N250,000.

He wrote: “In my recent monograph, ‘The Nigerian Public Discourse: The Interplay of Empirical Evidence and Hyperbole’, I had made the point at page 89 that the word used in item 34 of the Exclusive Legislative list is minimum wage.

“It does not talk about salaries. I further stated that ‘…it has also been shown, wages and salaries are different and should not be conflated.’ I posited that ‘…efforts to improve minimum wage must be that and nothing more. It must not translate to a salary overhaul by accident’.

“Therefore, it seems obvious from this definition that by making a law in Section 3(1) of the Minimum Wage Act that the minimum wage of N30,000 shall be paid monthly, the NASS may have acted unconstitutionally by legislating on a SALARY (monthly payment) when they only have power to legislate on WAGES, an hourly payment.

“This is important while the conversation on minimum wage is being had in 2024 because in Section 3(4), the minimum wage ‘shall be reviewed in line with the provisions of this Act’ which includes Section 3(1) that has prescribed a monthly amount instead of an hourly wage.

“If we follow the proper definition of wages as an hourly rate and apply the global method for computing it, which is to divide the gross annual sum by 52 weeks, and further by 40 hours recommended per week, we will have for Nigeria a minimum wage that is not N30,000 per month, but rather N30,000 X 12 (months) = N36,000 divided by 52 (weeks) = N6,923.07 divided by 40 (hours), which will give a minimum wage of N173.07 per hour.

“What we have done is to erroneously fix monthly minimum salaries as wages, and then effect consequential adjustment for all other SALARY EARNERS, which results in a bloated compensation wage that employees find difficult to meet.”