Fury Erupts Over Proposed Pay Hike For Nigerian Politicians Amidst Public Hardship

The African Democratic Congress (ADC) and various public voices have vehemently criticised the proposed increase in the salaries of political officeholders in Nigeria, spearheaded by the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC). Described as “tone-deaf” and “an affront to the Nigerian people,” the suggestion comes at a time of severe economic hardship, including soaring food inflation, escalating fuel prices, and a minimum wage that remains largely unpaid and inadequate for millions of citizens.
Despite RMAFC’s constitutional mandate to periodically review emoluments, proposing such a substantial pay raise for the President, Vice-President, governors, and other top government officials is seen as a profound disconnect from the realities faced by ordinary Nigerians. The commission chairman, Mohammed Bello Shehu, justified the review by stating that the current remuneration package (e.g., President at ₦1.5 million monthly, ministers less than ₦1 million) is “inadequate, unrealistic, and outdated” for their responsibilities. However, critics argue that these figures represent merely the “tip of the compensation iceberg.”
Beyond the official salaries, Nigerian political officeholders benefit from a pervasive “shadow compensation system” that significantly inflates their actual earnings. These include “sundry bogus and opaque allowances, perks, and other discretionary funds” such as housing allowances for luxurious accommodations, vehicle maintenance and fuel allowances for fleets of official cars, domestic staff allowances, entertainment allowances for lavish events, and constituency allowances often used as discretionary funds. Ministers, for instance, receive $900 per night in estacode for travel. When all these benefits are factored in, a President’s total compensation package can reportedly exceed “₦100 million annually,” shielding them from the economic realities that burden average Nigerians.
This shocking disparity highlights a shattered social contract and grotesque inequality. While an entry-level civil servant struggles on a minimum wage of ₦70,000 to ₦90,000 per month, the President’s estimated total monthly pay package exceeds ₦8.3 million, and ministers’ total monthly earnings are estimated at ₦2-3 million. A senator’s compensation, shrouded in secrecy, is also estimated around ₦2-3 million. This creates a staggering ratio, with some lawmakers allegedly pocketing up to ₦30 million monthly, leading to a ratio of nearly 430:1 compared to the minimum wage. This profound imbalance contributes to Nigeria having one of the world’s highest levels of inequality.
The argument that increased salaries would curb corruption is widely dismissed as flawed and insulting. Critics point to instances like the alleged diversion of ₦2.67 billion from the ₦100 billion National Home Grown School Feeding Programme during the COVID-19 lockdown, demonstrating that resources meant for the poor routinely disappear into private pockets. The political elite, already insulated by numerous perks, are seen as prioritizing personal enrichment over national welfare, making demands for sacrifice from citizens while living in “obscene indulgence.”
In response to this proposed plan, the ADC and other stakeholders demand its immediate suspension. Instead of enriching political elites, the government should focus on improving the lives of the masses. Key recommendations include: prioritizing raising the minimum wage to a living standard, ensuring timely and fair salaries for civil servants, and strengthening social welfare programs for vulnerable Nigerians. Furthermore, there is a call for greater transparency, with political officeholders fully disclosing their complete compensation packages, including all allowances and perks.
True leadership, it is argued, requires empathy and a connection to the people being served. This includes political leaders experiencing the public services they oversee, such as using public healthcare and schools. Proposals also advocate for implementing ratio limits between the highest and lowest paid public officials to maintain a connection to citizens' economic realities. The government's focus should be shifted to national development priorities like improving agriculture, creating jobs, stabilizing power supply, and enhancing security, rather than creating an “insulated political class” divorced from national realities. Strengthening anti-corruption measures, ensuring the certainty of consequences for misappropriation of public funds, is deemed more effective than merely increasing salaries.
Ultimately, public office should be about service and sacrifice, not entitlement. The current trajectory, where governors’ convoys guzzle fuel freely while ordinary citizens trek due to unaffordable transport fares, is deemed unsustainable and potentially explosive. Instead of reviewing salaries upward, there is a strong call to regulate political luxury by cutting down on numerous aides, frivolous foreign trips, multiple SUVs, and lavish banquet budgets. Resources should be redirected to vital areas like education, healthcare, infrastructure, and ensuring a living wage for workers. The measure of a society lies in its treatment of its most vulnerable, and by this standard, Nigeria’s political elite are seen as failing their nation by prioritizing their comfort over the suffering of their people.
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