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The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors - Career (2) - Nairaland

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Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by chynie: 8:42am On Apr 06, 2016
a
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by OlujobaSamuel: 8:50am On Apr 06, 2016
salaries should be based on level which is determined by qualification. allowance should cover any relative difference as to the nature of the job done, and it should never be determined indiscriminately.

1 Like

Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by chynie: 8:51am On Apr 06, 2016
Dee60:

First, a good number of people go into those places, CBN, FIRS etc do not do so because the salaries are big.

Secondly, there were reports recently that top politicians, who are already very rich have smuggled their kids into CBN.

Why do you think they do that?

Unfortunately, some Nigerian rulers have enjoyed so much loot and have taught their children how to continue after them. This is why Nigerians must demand that employment into those places must be 100pct transparent and 100pct on merit.

Why is there such a rush to go to CBN? By the way, the rush to Immigration Ministry, Police, places you claim have lower salaries, is far more than the rush to CBN and NNPC? Why is that?

I thought that if the children of the rulers are really competenet (after all the millions spent to go abroad for education) they should be applying to GTB, First Bank, afterall these guys pay much more!

Yes, civil servants should earn well. The issues are larger than that. It borders on the rulers and the rich wanting to hold Nigeria captive forever.


like what are u really saying angry
u be agent of confusion o
see as u angry confuse me with all the rubbish u typed

1 Like

Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by NorttGate: 9:19am On Apr 06, 2016
dicefrost:
It is quite worrisome though, but op must realize that equal treatment is not always fair. The productivity of the workers and the length of training and sensitivity of the job must be taken into account. However it is really absurd when there is no basis for the disparity. For instance an accountant working in the health sector may earn more than those in other public establishment. A Nurse in NNPC earns far more than one in a teaching hospital, even if they have similar qualification and experience. I think a serious review is needed. But it ll be difficult since everyone ll have a way of justifying what he earns.
But in the case of teachers, lets be honest, how many hours a day do they work? How many months a year do they work? How many 'holidays' do they have? If work should be commensurate with wages, they should earn slightly less than others.
oh my goodness
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by eyinjuege: 9:29am On Apr 06, 2016
Meringe:
In the media, level 8 step 2 staff goes home with 50k+ ,while some body in civil defence in the same cadre goes home with about 100k.

The issue about salary structure is about which ministry or department or agency that can bribe their way out or influence the Salary and Wages Commission to approve their salary structure.

This is very unfair.


I personally accuse the people at the Salary and Wages Commission for being the problem behind this discrepancies in salary of public servants.


Because they are on the same level and step doesn't mean they should earn same.

Why? Because they may have different qualifications and may offer different services.

Concerning media staff and civil defence staff, their hazard allowance may be different and also allowance for shifts done by civil defence may just be the cause of the discrepancy.

Another example is a cleaner and an accountant on the same level e.g level 8. Do you really think they should earn the same?
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by seangy4konji: 9:38am On Apr 06, 2016
Even if na peanuts,some workers are still owed 6 months salaries.

2 Likes

Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by seguno2: 9:48am On Apr 06, 2016
THEWRITERSMIND:
Under the present remuneration package, especially for elected officials, a local government chairman whose required qualifications is a secondary school certificate earns a higher salary than a university professor who have spent at least two decades in serious academic research.

Does anyone know why this is the case in our country?
Can this not demoralise and discourage the real workers from being productive and optimal performance?
Is it the same difference in other countries of the world?
Should it continue or not to be so in Nigeria?
If not, how do we correct it?
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by olujaidi: 10:05am On Apr 06, 2016
The disparity comes as a result of the fact that the boards of most parastatals e.g. CBN are empowered by the laws setting them up to fix their own salaries. I think that of other civil servants is set by the Salaries and Wages Commission.
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by Meringe(m): 11:21am On Apr 06, 2016
eyinjuege:



Because they are on the same level and step doesn't mean they should earn same.

Why? Because they may have different qualifications and may offer different services.

Concerning media staff and civil defence staff, their hazard allowance may be different and also allowance for shifts done by civil defence may just be the cause of the discrepancy.

Another example is a cleaner and an accountant on the same level e.g level 8. Do you really think they should earn the same?
Media works on shift too. His job is also hazardous. He faces a lot of danger during the course of his job.

That's not a reason for such gap.
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by Nobody: 11:25am On Apr 06, 2016
Those that are in the system have better knowledge on what the op said. Imagine a level 08/01 worker of kwara state is earning #27500 monthly while his counterpart in Federal job (fedpoffa) having the same qualification is earning #120,000 monthly. Someone should tell me the yardstick used by the salary and wages commission to deserve this disparity....do not forget both of them go to the same market and paid the same bills because they live in the same town.
Economically, we believe there are some factors to be considered before fixing the salaries like qualifications, nature of job, hours of work, cost of living etc but yet, the gap must be bridged especially btw federal and state civil servants.
Remember, we have close to 100million people between the working age and all these people cannot secure federal job. To reduce unemployment and underemployment, urgent measures has to be taken.
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by Meringe(m): 11:25am On Apr 06, 2016
stanisbaratheon:


one thing you have to understand is that Cadres differ. I mean you don't expect someone in the armed forces to be earning less than an office cleark In state ministry naw.


I think this disparity is due to the nature of their jobs
We are talking about public servants in federal establishments.
Even if there's supposed to be allowances to cover for the hazardous jobs but it shouldn't be that case of cbn staff going home with High salary while his counterpart in the same cadre in other mdas going home with peanut, that's very unfair.
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by stanisbaratheon: 11:34am On Apr 06, 2016
Meringe:

We are talking about public servants in federal establishments.
Even if there's supposed to be allowances to cover for the hazardous jobs but it shouldn't be that case of cbn staff going home with High salary while his counterpart in the same cadre in other mdas going home with peanut, that's very unfair.

well
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by Temidayo9(m): 11:46am On Apr 06, 2016
Terms and conditions of service, salary structure were given to you during employment, now you re here spew rubbish. Where i work, we don't generate any kobo for govt. Meanwhile some agency were given target of billions to generate in a month. Even life itself not fair, Rich and poor etc.
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by Mike008(m): 12:04pm On Apr 06, 2016
THEWRITERSMIND:
Salary is a wage given to a worker in form of money for services rendered. The word salary comes from a Latin word salsalis literary meaning sword. It came about from the practice of ancient Roman soldiers paying with sword because it is the most valuable item in that era. That was replaced with cash when money became accepted as a medium of exchange.

Salary originated from the Latin word "Salarium" not "Salsalis".

Salt was highly prized by the Romans - soldiers were sometimes paid in salt, which is how the word 'salary' originated.

Sal - from salt not sword.
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by DrTims(m): 3:57pm On Apr 06, 2016
Even at state level. Workers of the same level in some states are quite different from other state In term of the salary they collect. The system is really faulty to say the least.

1 Like

Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by TheSociopath(m): 4:20pm On Apr 06, 2016
dicefrost:
It is quite worrisome though, but op must realize that equal treatment is not always fair. The productivity of the workers and the length of training and sensitivity of the job must be taken into account. However it is really absurd when there is no basis for the disparity. For instance an accountant working in the health sector may earn more than those in other public establishment. A Nurse in NNPC earns far more than one in a teaching hospital, even if they have similar qualification and experience. I think a serious review is needed. But it ll be difficult since everyone ll have a way of justifying what he earns.
But in the case of teachers, lets be honest, how many hours a day do they work? How many months a year do they work? How many 'holidays' do they have? If work should be commensurate with wages, they should earn slightly less than others.


The lecturers that publish journals with their own money after working on them for several days should earn less too ba?
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by esere826: 5:12pm On Apr 06, 2016
THEWRITERSMIND:
Salary is a wage given to a worker in form of money for services rendered. The word salary comes from a Latin word salsalis literary meaning sword. It came about from the practice of ancient Roman soldiers paying with sword because it is the most valuable item in that era. That was replaced wit......./
Thumbs up for the write up.
The root word for salary is actually salt, not sword. Tnx

2 Likes

Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by amshak(m): 3:51am On Apr 07, 2016
THEWRITERSMIND:
Salary is a wage given to a worker in form of money for services rendered. The word salary comes from a Latin word salsalis literary meaning sword. It came about from the practice of ancient Roman soldiers paying with sword because it is the most valuable item in that era. That was replaced with cash when money became accepted as a medium of exchange.

Over the years, there has been several salary structures and reviews in the country. However, a cursory look indicates that the nation is yet to arrive at an equitable salary structure. For example, there is no harmony in the salaries paid by the federal and state governments to civil servants even though the qualifications and requirements for entry into the nation’s public service are the same. It is disturbing that people with the same qualifications but employed in different offices of public service receive different salaries, a times double or even triple that of their counterpart. Even more worrisome is the disparity between salaries of the core ministries and those of departments and agencies.

This has reflected in the huge gap in salaries variations of the NNPC, CBN, FIRS, customs, paramilitary agencies and the core civil servants. Those who fix salary structures which are the cause of the wide gap forgot that all government employees buy from the same Nigerian market.

Of note also is the wider gap in salaries of permanent secretaries and directors general and their immediate subordinate. Their salaries are quite bogus compared to others who are next in rank with them. There is a compelling need for the incomes salaries and wages commission to urgently take a look at these gross anomalies and rectify it immediately.

This sorry situation was neither the norm in the first republic nor in the second republic. This practice started during the military regime from 1985 to 1998 as well as the lopsided and sadistic salary reviews that was carried out between 2005 and 2006 that ushered in this unfair practice.

In developed nations, wages are fixed based on academic and technical qualifications and allowances are fixed according to the nature of the job. Unfortunately in Nigeria, the case is not the same. In many agencies funded by the same federal budget, it is shocking to discover that a junior officer with a lower qualifications in some organizations earn higher salaries than most directorate cadre staff in many ministries and parastatals.

Under the present remuneration package, especially for elected officials, a local government chairman whose required qualifications is a secondary school certificate earns a higher salary than a university professor who have spent at least two decades in serious academic research.

Worthy to note also is the case of primary and secondary school teachers who have remained the least paid under the Nigerian salary system. It is imperative for all stakeholders to consider the human capacity development which these teachers facilitate is superior to the production of raw money which those who fix the unfair salary system in Nigeria use as a criteria.

For instance, if the NNPC, CBN and the other well paid staff are not trained by these school teachers, they wouldn’t be in position to earn any salary. Past federal governments did constitute a committee for the harmonization of wage disparity in the public service, but till today nothing has been heard of its reports or recommendations. The various labor leaders must take on the problem of wage disparity and ensure its elimination promptly.

The benefits to be derived from the correction of these anomalies are unquantifiable, it will track unnecessary job mobility and corruption. It will enthrone fairness, equity, motivation and higher productivity among workers. The private sector will also borrow a leaf from such a fair practice.

The present administration of President Muhammadu Buhari must take a step to rectify these anomalies in the salary structure of public service in the country. Let there be platform for fixing salaries, allowances can be fixed according to job demands and performances. Government must do away with all such old practices and come up with a solution to these taught provoking issues like the consolidation of salaries for various sectors, this is to ensure equity for all public servants in the country.
This required urgent action!

http://www.financialwatchngr.com/2016/04/06/need-eliminate-wage-disparity-nigerian-public-sectors/
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by bukatyne(f): 11:35am On Apr 09, 2016
dicefrost:
It is quite worrisome though, but op must realize that equal treatment is not always fair. The productivity of the workers and the length of training and sensitivity of the job must be taken into account. However it is really absurd when there is no basis for the disparity. For instance an accountant working in the health sector may earn more than those in other public establishment. A Nurse in NNPC earns far more than one in a teaching hospital, even if they have similar qualification and experience. I think a serious review is needed. But it ll be difficult since everyone ll have a way of justifying what he earns.
But in the case of teachers, lets be honest, how many hours a day do they work? How many months a year do they work? How many 'holidays' do they have? If work should be commensurate with wages, they should earn slightly less than others.

You are getting the 'equal treatment' wrong

Everyone should be paid equally based on the structure I.e. if I put in the same hours as you with the same qualifications and the same years of service, we should earn same.

I obviously would not expect to earn same as a level 12 officer if I am on level 9.

@OP: the disparity is everywhere.

Is equity/equality of wages feasible? I do not know.
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by bukatyne(f): 11:38am On Apr 09, 2016
Dottore:
Everybody goes to the same market and pays the same utility bills for God sake

True

However you do no expect to have same purchasing power with your MD.

That's why you have ice kobi kobi, fan milk yorgurt & blue bunny ice-cream.

Buy the one for your level & work harder to get to the top.
Re: The Need To Eliminate Wage Disparity In Nigerian Public Sectors by bukatyne(f): 11:41am On Apr 09, 2016
sunny3kng:
Like it or not, their Value is the difference.

I would say 'perceived value' and I 100% concur.

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