President Muhammadu Buhari’s government has recommended that the new administration of president-elect Bola Tinubu give civil servants pay rises after removing a fuel subsidy in June.
Buhari, who steps down in May, planned to remove the popular but costly subsidy in 2022 as part of fiscal and petroleum sector reforms but abandoned the plan because of fears of protests in the run-up to the 2023 election.
Previous governments have attempted to remove the fuel subsidy, which most economists say is an unsustainable drag on public finances, but have failed to do so because of fierce opposition from citizens.
Many Nigerians regard cheap subsidised fuel as at least one benefit they receive from the government, which fails to deliver other basic services such as electricity and security despite receiving billions of dollars every year from oil exports.
“We have already concluded on the issue of pay rise … we recommended 5% and 10% pay rise for workers in different categories,” Labour Minister Chris Ngige said on Tuesday.
While the new government is not obliged to act on the recommendation, the call does put pressure on Tinubu to fulfil his campaign promise to remove the fuel subsidy – even though the outgoing administration itself failed to do so.
Tinubu, who is from the same party as Buhari, also promised during his presidential election campaign to ramp up oil production and deregulate midstream gas prices within six months.
Tinubu said in his manifesto that he would channel the money saved on the subsidy into agriculture, social welfare, road construction, public transport subsidies, education and healthcare.
Nigeria set aside 3.36 trillion naira ($7.3 billion) to spend on the subsidy until mid-2023, according to its finance minister.