TheCitizen - It's all about you
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
TheCitizen - It's all about you
No Result
View All Result

Beyond SPW: Strategic path to job creation – Punch

The Citizen by The Citizen
July 16 2020
in Public Affairs
A A
0
Lagos, Ebonyi lead as Nigeria records 571 new COVID-19 cases, 16 deaths

Nigeria is emerging slowly from the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown with a lot on its plate. Another pressing issue is the mounting joblessness in the ranks of its workforce. Undoubtedly, the pandemic and the shrinking oil income have aggravated the high unemployment. Since March, the economic lockdown to contain the spread of the virus has cost millions of jobs nationwide. In recognition of this, the Federal Government has launched the Special Public Works programme being coordinated by the labour ministry.

The SWP, the National Directorate of Employment says, is one of its four core programmes. It seeks to identify and exploit employment opportunities that abound in the public works sector by organising the skilled, semi-skilled and unskilled persons that are unemployed to carry out utility, environmental, infrastructure development and sanitation works.

If properly implemented, the SPW could serve as a temporary relief for unskilled labourers and give a facelift to Nigeria’s dirty environment, but there are fears it could be marred by politics and corruption. Essentially, the programme is geared towards hiring 774,000 persons in all the local government areas of the country from October to December on a monthly salary of N20,000. Each of the 774 LGAs is entitled to 1,000 employees, who will clear drainage, repair roads, direct traffic and clean the environment. Unfortunately, the hope that the SPW offers the downtrodden could be short-lived.

But before its official inauguration, the programme has already become embroiled in political bickering. The Minister of State for Labour, Employment and Productivity, Festus Keyamo, who is in charge, is engaged in a very bitter spat with the National Assembly over the SPW’s modality. Lawmakers are complaining that Keyamo did not carry them along in the implementation of the scheme and later suspended it. Keyamo argued that the lawmakers had no power to give directives to the executive under Section 88 of the 1999 Constitution. He is right.

On Wednesday, the National Assembly met on the issue again in reaction to the directive of the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), that Keyamo should go ahead with the scheme. The executive should ignore the NASS. The lawmakers’ request is a euphemism to control the levers to corner, allocate or distribute public resources. In this case, it pertains to a minister or party chief getting more slots than a lawmaker does in the project’s execution. This storm is needless. The decent manner for all the parties is to accomplish this programme transparently by focusing on the neediest in society.

This should be a temporary way to create jobs. Realistically, Nigeria needs far more than the SPW could ever offer its army of jobless citizens. At various times, economists and the government see the unemployment figures aptly as a time bomb. The situation has deteriorated steadily over the past years, especially after recession hit the economy in 2016. With Nigeria’s population hitting the 200-million mark, the uncontrolled explosion in population is another element. As of first quarter 2020, the National Bureau of Statistics gave an unemployment rate of 21.3 per cent and put underemployment at 20.21 per cent. That is alarming, but the unemployment rate for the youth is far worse.

Pre-COVID-19, Labour Minister, Chris Ngige, had projected that unemployment would jump to 33.5 per cent in 2020 on the back of sluggish growth. As the lockdown bites harder, joblessness is blowing out of proportion, save for a few insulated sectors like telecoms and the oil industry. A survey by the NBS distressingly found that the commerce, services and agriculture sectors recorded the highest number of layoffs. The NBS said that COVID-19 has rendered 42 per cent of workers jobless. In June, the World Food Programme said that the pandemic could cause 13 million Nigerian jobs, stretching into 2021. That is mild as Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo admits that the government envisages 39.4 million job losses by year-end.

In this scenario, small and medium-sized enterprises, the lifeblood of the economy and jobs, are hard hit. They account for 96 per cent of businesses and 84 per cent of jobs (in comparison to 53 per cent of jobs in the United States, 60 per cent in South Africa, and 65 per cent in Europe), contributing nearly half of the GDP in the past five years.

In response, the Central Bank of Nigeria intervened with a N1.15 trillion COVID-19 stimulus package, with reduced interest rates to push the economy back to life. During this period, the Federal Government has borrowed $3 billion from the IMF, targeted at revitalising the comatose power sector. This seems to be a long-term measure. As oil income fluctuated, the central government reassessed the 2020 budget, but with no significant reduction in recurrent costs, the impact of the review is subject to conjecture.

The Buhari regime should focus more on the critical areas of the economy in urgent need of attention, particularly electricity. Nigeria fares woefully here, unable to power its industries and homes with generation oscillating between 3,000 megawatts and 5,000MW. The ease of doing business is a concern. Although the country improved by 15 places to 131 out of 190 in the 2020 World Bank rankings, not much has changed in the business milieu: goods are still late in clearing at the seaports.

The political economy stands as the worst debacle. For the states to contribute and compete economically and create jobs, the Federal Government has to implement a federal fiscal system, where each state would thrive in its area of comparative advantage. Simultaneously, the Federal Government should privatise the critical sectors of the economy, especially downstream oil and steel. It should target a repeal of the Railways Act 1955 to liberalise that high-job capacity sector, while getting manufacturers back to production with innovative policies.

Previous Post

The ‘missing’ billions in MDAs – Thisday

Next Post

Trump takes over control of U.S COVID-19 data

Related Posts

Blackouts: Broken promises, powering failure – Punch
Public Affairs

Electricity Act: What are states waiting for? – Punch

April 29 2026
Bwala, Hasan and the art of the political interview
Public Affairs

NBC threat to press freedom – Punch

April 28 2026
Curfew in Abuja today for LG council elections
Public Affairs

Hidden cost of elections – Punch

April 17 2026
Oil prices jump back toward $100 on Mideast ceasefire doubts
Public Affairs

As Nigeria moves away from oil dependency – Punch

April 13 2026
Easter gets bloodier – Punch
Public Affairs

Easter gets bloodier – Punch

April 12 2026
Security chiefs’ discordant tunes – Punch
Public Affairs

Security chiefs’ discordant tunes – Punch

April 10 2026
Next Post
Trump takes over control of U.S COVID-19 data

Trump takes over control of U.S COVID-19 data

Scammers hack Obama, Biden, Musk Twitter accounts

Scammers hack Obama, Biden, Musk Twitter accounts

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

FROM THE GRASSROOTS

Service Chiefs: Let the changes count – Punch

Tinubu approves ₦17bn grassroots devt fund for 8,804 wards

by The Editor
April 22 2026
0

...

Police launch manhunt for killers of Imo traditional ruler

Police launch manhunt for killers of Imo traditional ruler

by The Editor
April 11 2026
0

...

Lassa fever deaths rise in Nigeria

Lassa fever deaths rise in Nigeria

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

...

Oyo govt installs Sen Alli, two Ibadan High Chiefs as monarchs in absentia

Oyo govt installs Sen Alli, two Ibadan High Chiefs as monarchs in absentia

by The Editor
April 3 2026
0

...

APPOINTMENTS

Tinubu appoints NECO, NBTE chairmen, names poly rector, renews library DG tenure

Tinubu appoints NECO, NBTE chairmen, names poly rector, renews library DG tenure

by The Editor
April 22 2026
0

...

416 nurses, midwives get automatic appointments in Yobe

416 nurses, midwives get automatic appointments in Yobe

by The Editor
April 8 2026
0

...

Tinubu renews Bugaje’s appointment as NBTE boss

Tinubu renews Bugaje’s appointment as NBTE boss

by The Editor
April 2 2026
0

...

Kwara governor congratulates new CAF General Secretary

Kwara governor congratulates new CAF General Secretary

by The Editor
April 1 2026
0

...

ODDITIES

Indian man digs up sister’s skeleton to claim savings

Indian man digs up sister’s skeleton to claim savings

by The Editor
April 28 2026
0

Nigeria’s ambassador-designate dies before assumption of office

Nigeria’s ambassador-designate dies before assumption of office

by The Editor
April 22 2026
0

Bwala, Hasan and the art of the political interview

I had throat surgery after Al Jazeera interview – Daniel Bwala

by The Editor
April 11 2026
0

GLOBAL NEWS

UN raises concern over renewed xenophobic attacks in South Africa

UN raises concern over renewed xenophobic attacks in South Africa

by The Editor
April 29 2026
0

...

FG demands protection after xenophobics kill two Nigerians in South Africa

FG demands protection after xenophobics kill two Nigerians in South Africa

by The Editor
April 28 2026
0

...

Kenyan President apologises to Nigerians over English accent jibe

Kenyan President apologises to Nigerians over English accent jibe

by The Editor
April 28 2026
0

...

UK moves to restict social media for U-16s

UK moves to restict social media for U-16s

by The Editor
April 28 2026
0

...

White House gunman was targeting Trump team, says official

White House gunman was targeting Trump team, says official

by The Editor
April 26 2026
0

...

State of the States

Kano Assembly confirms new deputy governor

Kano Assembly confirms new deputy governor

by The Editor
April 27 2026
0

...

Ondo commences 2025 OSOPADEC scholarship, bursary for students

Ondo commences 2025 OSOPADEC scholarship, bursary for students

by The Editor
April 21 2026
0

...

Delta govt urges youths to join Army

Delta govt urges youths to join Army

by The Editor
April 11 2026
0

...

21,452 applicants jostle for 1,000 rural teaching Jobs in Nasarawa

21,452 applicants jostle for 1,000 rural teaching Jobs in Nasarawa

by The Editor
April 10 2026
0

...

Plugin Install : Widget Tab Post needs JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Tinubu approves Abuja land for ambassadors-designate

Tinubu approves Abuja land for ambassadors-designate

April 29 2026
Divorce claims: No legal marriage exists between us – Churchill reacts to Rosy Meurer split

Divorce claims: No legal marriage exists between us – Churchill reacts to Rosy Meurer split

April 29 2026
2027 Polls: Court bars INEC from recognising ADC congresses

2027 Polls: Court bars INEC from recognising ADC congresses

April 29 2026
UN raises concern over renewed xenophobic attacks in South Africa

UN raises concern over renewed xenophobic attacks in South Africa

April 29 2026

EDITORIAL REVIEW

Blackouts: Broken promises, powering failure – Punch

Electricity Act: What are states waiting for? – Punch

by The Editor
April 29 2026
0

Bwala, Hasan and the art of the political interview

NBC threat to press freedom – Punch

by The Editor
April 28 2026
0

Curfew in Abuja today for LG council elections

Hidden cost of elections – Punch

by The Editor
April 17 2026
0

Oil prices jump back toward $100 on Mideast ceasefire doubts

As Nigeria moves away from oil dependency – Punch

by The Editor
April 13 2026
0

Easter gets bloodier – Punch

Easter gets bloodier – Punch

by The Editor
April 12 2026
0

Opinion

Even INEC admonishes the media?

Even INEC admonishes the media?

by The Editor
April 12 2026
0

...

Enugu: Gov Mbah presents N521.5bn budget for 2024

Mbah: From contested mandate to constructive governance in Enugu

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

...

Tinubu finds his own demons

How will Tinubu campaign in Plateau State?

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

...

Bwala, Hasan and the art of the political interview

Bwala, Hasan and the art of the political interview

by The Editor
April 6 2026
0

...

Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials

© 2026 TheCitizen Ng. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials

© 2026 TheCitizen Ng. All Rights Reserved.