Nigeria’s president Muhammadu Buhari has signed into law a bill increasing the country’s minimum wage to 30,000 naira (US$98) from 18,000, Ita Enang, a senior special assistant to the president on the National Assembly said.
The cost of living has become a key issues for many in Africa’s most populous nation, where most people live on less than US$2 a day. Unions went on strike last year over the minimum wage, initially demanding a rise to 50,000 naira a month.
Inflation in Nigeria stood at 11.25 percent in March.
“President Muhammadu Buhari has assented to the Minimum Wage Repeal and Enactment Act 2019,” said Enang.
The new rate, which Enang said comes into law immediately, is applicable to both the private and public sector, but smaller businesses which employ fewer than 25 people would be exempt.
The government had previously argued that many of Nigeria’s 36 states struggle to meet existing salaries. Unions said when launching industrial action last year that a review was needed, however, as none had been carried out in seven years.
Nigerian states receive monthly allocations from the federal government coffers, but many states have not paid public sector workers for months, citing the economic downturn.
The last increase was in 2011, when wages were more than doubled, from 7,500 to 18,000 naira.