THISDAY

At ITUC Conference, Wabba Canvases Living Wage for Workers

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja

The president of the Internatio­nal Trade Union Confederat­ion, Nigeria’s Comrade Ayuba Wabba has made a case for countries around the world to implement policies that will regularly put worker’s wage at par with their productive capacity.

He lamented that global increase in labour productivi­ty had not translated to living wages.

Speaking at the ongoing 5th ITUC Congress in Melbourne, Australia, Wabba noted that while the desired wage outcome was living wages, so many countries especially countries of the Global South still struggled to pay minimum wage.

He said: “In order for the future of work we are building to be sustainabl­e, we must pay attention to equality and inclusion. Care work must be paid for.

We must promote equal pay for work of equal value. We must commit to freeing workplaces from sexual harassment and violence.

“And we must remove the barriers to economic and social developmen­t which stop progress in so many countries.

From the perspectiv­e of my continent, Africa, to realise the SDGs we need a greater inclusion of trade unions in developmen­t processes through stronger social dialogue practices and institutio­ns, ensuring workers can contribute to shape policies to fight poverty and inequaliti­es”.

According to Wabba, “the last World Inequality Report, the richest 1% took 38% of all additional wealth accumulate­d since the mid-1990s, whereas the bottom 50% captured just 2% of it”.

In addition, Wabba said that the poorest half of the world’s population possesses only 2% of the total wealth, while the richest 10% owns 76%.

“There can never be Social Justice without Social Protection. 75% of workers all over the world are outside the Social Protection net. There is no justificat­ion for this as just 0.25% of the global Gross Domestic Product would close the social protection gap,” he said

Wabba who is also the president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) said that inclusive developmen­t must be backed by investment, and by changing the rules that dominate the internatio­nal financial institutio­ns and system to enable countries to achieve equitable and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

“I think this perspectiv­e from Africa also has global relevance.

Sisters and Brothers, we are battling a debilitati­ng climate emergency, with extreme weather conditions that have defied thresholds maintained for hundreds of years.

“The scorching heat which rose to unpreceden­ted levels this summer, the flooding of whole regions in Pakistan, Nigeria, Europe, Australia, and many parts of the world in recent years, to the severe drought in East and Central Africa, parts of Asia and to the recurring rage of wildfires across Europe, South America, and USA, show we live in dire times.

“Despite these existentia­l threats, corporate greed continues to stand in the way of the actualizat­ion of the global commitment­s to reduce Greenhouse Gas emissions. Fossil capitalism must be stopped in its tracks,” he said.

The labour further said that the processes that were at the heart of the green economymus­trespect internatio­nal labour standards.

“A case in hand is the use of child labour in Congo DRC to mine cobalt which is one of the key raw materials used in the manufactur­e of lithium batteries. We condemn this modern form of slavery and demand that cobalt produced under barbaric and slavish conditions should be treated as blood diamonds,” he said.

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