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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs (13516 Views)
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You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by MrImole: 10:15am On Aug 22, 2016 |
http://punchng.com/cannot-force-workers-farming-labour-tells-govs/ 1 Like 1 Share
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Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by smellingmenses: 10:27am On Aug 22, 2016 |
This is one of the reasons why power needs to be devolved to the LG's..... They understand the people better 4 Likes 1 Share |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by lytech1(m): 10:39am On Aug 22, 2016 |
Confused administration... Can't they employ some set of unemployed citizen to fill the void of farming and use the medium to create employment? I doubt the hope of common man in this country 37 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by chernest2002: 11:06am On Aug 22, 2016 |
Apc wants all power in order to dictate and control the people anyhow they want. 8 Likes |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by venom13(m): 1:27pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
I tell for free indian and Chinese Companies treat Nigeria citizens as slaves the almighty NLC will not fight for us, private companies will sack staff without a meaningful explanation NLC will not say anything. But Government is trying to create jobs for millions of Nigerians NLC came out talking rubbish 15 Likes |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by adewale2011(m): 1:28pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
ok !!!
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Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by veekid(m): 1:28pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
Abi o; abeg tell them o |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by MrPresident1: 1:30pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
Honestly, it is good to farm, to produce your own food is just great! 1 Like |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by Spells(m): 1:31pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
This administration needs deliverance... Serious one 17 Likes 2 Shares
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Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by nerdymufasa(m): 1:31pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
Oh, I guess this is the way of justifying the low minimum wage, by reducing working hours... 3 Likes |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by ironheart(m): 1:32pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
lazy sets of workers, they are giving you opportunity to make extra income and you do not want it. 2 Likes |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by Olasco93: 1:33pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
"In the time of Femine, Isaac prospered..." 1 Like |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by ammyluv2002(f): 1:33pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
MrPresident1:Yes! It's okay to farm, but did the governors provide the necessary things like lands etc? 6 Likes |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by jejemanito: 1:33pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
You Elders That Always Berate The Youth For Detesting Farm Work, Oya Come And Come And Go To Farm! 1 Like |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by MrPresident1: 1:35pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
ammyluv2002: And is should not be under duress too. |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by Nobody: 1:37pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
yes it's true ! you cannot force workers to go into farming BUT Hunger will force them....shiorr |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by wakes: 1:40pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
Benue State Governor declared Friday as Farm day for workers. But in this case I support it since the government is not able to pay staff, they should be allowed to farm for food else how can they feed their families? So I support it in a way. Not a bad idea after all. My take though. |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by dayoungmoney1: 1:40pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
Restructuring of this country is the way out of the mess we have currently found ourselves. #RestructureNigeriaNow 1 Like |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by mostyg(m): 1:40pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
What is always wrong with our Unions? 3 Likes |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by free2ryhme: 1:42pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
It is something that we have already rejected and condemned, you cannot force people to go into farming. Even, if you will to do that, it must be through a process of consultation because these workers are not slaves. In industrial relations, the issue of consultation, collective bargaining is used before a policy is actually adopted and in this respect there was no consultation.” Which one is not labour? Farming? These civil servants are used to stealing in government Offices and will definately scuttle the farming Programme of the government. When you were being employed, was there any consultations before you were given appointment letters? Alot of you do not stay in the Office yet will rain hell on Superiors when they fail to sign your overtime forms. I am a civil servant and i know what civil servants particularly government workers are doing. When shall we be true to ourselves and move this Country Forward? Naija i weep for you. 3 Likes |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by coalcoal1(m): 1:45pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
Agriculture is NOT the magic solution August 21 2016 by Simon Kolawole Anytime I hear Nigerian presidents, ministers, governors, economists, analysts and commentators declare that agriculture is the alternative to oil, and that the solution to Nigeria’s economic woes is to return to the farm, I am tempted to jump up and ask at full volume: “Who agriculture alone don epp?” Some states have hilariously declared work-free days for civil servants to go to the farm. It would be nice to see those farms and how well the emergency farmers are doing. We’ve been told again and again that agriculture, as Nigeria’s biggest employer of labour, is the magic solution to unemployment, that we will export agricultural produce and earn plenty forex. Well done. I’ve been hearing this fairy-tale all my life. When I was a primary school kid, Lt. Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, then head of state, asked Nigerians to tighten their belts because the oil boom would not last forever. He added drama by tightening his military belt on TV. He launched Operation Feed the Nation. My grandfather responded by setting up a garden in our backyard. President Shehu Shagari did Green Revolution. The structural adjustment programme (SAP) of Gen. Ibrahim Babangida was basically about diversifying into agriculture. In different shapes, forms, sizes and packaging, we have been talking about agriculture, agriculture and agriculture forever. Since we love glamorising our exploits in the export of cocoa, coffee, palm oil and groundnuts before the oil boom doom, I will pick on just cocoa to dispel this ill-conceived notion and never-ending campaign that agriculture is the magic wand. We used to be the biggest producers of cocoa in the world. Chief Obafemi Awolowo utilised cocoa revenue to develop the south-west when he was premier of the region in the 1950s. But we dropped the ball along the line and Cote d’Ivoire overtook us. And now we are lamenting that we are nowhere to be found. The solution, therefore, is for the south-west to revive the cocoa farms. Oh, the good old days! Okay, let us talk about Cote d’Ivoire’s fabled cocoa wealth. Cote d’Ivoire produces 33% of world cocoa and exports to manufacturers such as Hershey’s, Mars Inc. (both in the US) and Nestlé (Switzerland). You know what Cote d’Ivoire earns yearly from exporting raw cocoa? A whopping $2.5bn. I repeat: a whopping $2.5bn! So Mars buys Ivorien cocoa and makes several products from it: Bounty, M&M, Mars and Milky Way, to name a few. You know Mars’ net income from chocolate products alone in 2015? According to the International Cocoa Organisation (ICCO), Mars made a pathetic $18bn, compared to Cote d’Ivoire’s whopping $2.5bn. Agriculture, indeed. If you are wondering how just one company, which manufactures chocolate, can earn seven times more than a whole country, which farms and exports the cocoa input, then you are asking the same question with me: Who agriculture alone don epp? On ICCO’s list of the world’s top 10 companies in net revenue from chocolate, you have three from America, two from Japan, two from Switzerland, and one each from Luxemburg/Italy, Argentina and Turkey. None from Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana and Indonesia — the world’s three biggest producers of raw cocoa. There must be something that Hershey’s, Mars and Nestlé know that we don’t know as we keep planting cocoa. To be fair, Cote d’Ivoire is waking up. In 2015, French chocolatier Cémoi opened a plant in Abidjan, the economic capital, to produce chocolate. President Alassane Ouattara, on touring the plant, said: “We want to be able to make chocolate for Ivoriens, for Africans and especially West Africans.” Ouattara (pronounced Wa-ta-ra) understands what we still don’t understand here: that agriculture without industry is dead, being alone. How could I buy cocoa worth $1m from you and make chocolate worth $10 million from it — and you think you are smart? If you are smart, you will start making the chocolate yourself and stop romanticising about the “good old days”. There was a video that went viral sometime ago. CNN’s Richard Quest visited a cocoa farm in Cote d’Ivoire. Come and see poverty written all over the faces of the farmers, who have been told for decades that agriculture is the magic solution to their problems. Quest gave the farmers bars of chocolate. They were eating the sweet stuff for the first time in their lives! Compare their lives to those of the executives of Mars Inc., who buy the cocoa beans from Cote d’Ivoire. They are flying private jets and holidaying in the moon, while the Ivorien farmers are fighting off flies and bees in the bushes of Koffikro. For your information, Mars Inc. has no cocoa farms! Don’t get me wrong please. If I have created the impression that agriculture is useless, I do apologise. That is not my intention. After all, agriculture is our culture. Millions of Nigerians are farming rice, beans, cassava and corn. That is huge employment. Also, we certainly can produce many food items that we are importing and burning precious forex on. But is that why governors are declaring work-free days for civil servants to go and plant melon and maize to solve Nigeria’s economic problem and stop the dependency on oil? If only these governors knew that Switzerland does not grow one tree of cocoa, yet makes the world’s most elegant chocolates! Let us break this whole agric logic into pieces. If we really want to diversify from oil and create proper value, agriculture must give birth to industry. If agriculture currently employs, say, 5 million Nigerians, agro-allied industry can employ 15 million in the value chain. So why do we spend so much time discussing farming and not industry? For example, how many graduates can a tomato farm employ compared to a factory making tomato purée? The factory will employ or engage the services of engineers, technicians, chemists, marketers, accountants, communicators, lawyers, administrators, drivers, and so on. It may even have a sick bay and employ doctors and nurses. I’m not done. A basket of tomatoes sells for N800 in Kaduna. A 400g tin of purée sells for N300. Look at how many bottles of purée you can get from a basket, and how much value you will be getting. Who, then, is making the real money? The factory will pay company tax, its employees will pay PAYE and the consumers will pay VAT. That is how government will boost its revenue. The purée bottle makers offer a different business altogether that employs workers and pays all kinds of taxes too. And if we are good enough, we can begin to export purée to other countries, and earn forex. This is just purée. Think of a thousand agro-allied factories. Think of our huge population. Sure, agriculture is very important in a primitive economy like ours. But we always miss the bigger picture. One, we need full optimisation of the sector to enhance productivity. A country like the US knows this much better: the percentage of the population engaged in farming is insignificant, but it is so optimised that the output is out of this world. For instance, the US produces enough rice for local consumption, for export, for aid and to dump in the sea to “stabilise” market prices. Two, processing is where you find the massive job opportunities. The agro-industry will yield far more output, more jobs and more economic value than Benue Friday Farming. These things look so simple and doable, but commonsense is not common. Our agricultural output can be far better in quantity and quality than currently obtains. We can do with better technology, storage, conditioning, packaging and transportation. Most importantly, our brains should focus on how industry can bring out the real value of agriculture and spark off a chain of economic activities that will create millions of good jobs and generate billions of dollars in revenue to investors, employees and government. But we seem excited only about preaching and promoting the export of raw produce, and we feel so smart we think this is the way out of our oil dependency! But how can we add value when, despite the billions of dollars we have made from oil since 1999, we don’t have the basic infrastructure to inspire an agro-based industrial explosion? Where are the roads? Where are the rails? Where is the electricity? Where is the security? Where is the finance? Yet I can point to uncountable private jets, mansions and customised cars that politicians and their friends have acquired since 1999 with proceeds from the oil boom — while they keep preaching stone-age agriculture to Nigerians. So if your governor joins this craze of declaring work-free days for primitive farming, just ask him politely: Your Excellency, who agriculture alone don epp? https://www.thecable.ng/agriculture-not-magic-solution 36 Likes 11 Shares |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by kingsmecca(m): 1:47pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
It's good to have one or more farmlands but to force someone into farming is no a good idea. I like farming but where's the land, capital, good access road? etc. 1 Like |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by Aajumi(f): 1:47pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
really wants wrong wit NLC....so annoying....govt just wants u to earn extra cash. Only if dey knw d wealth in farming....maybe d approach is wrong |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by free2ryhme: 1:48pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by divinelove(m): 1:53pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
farming should be optional and a matter of interest, the policy was ill concieved and lacks merits. instead of using workers y not use unemployed youth nw here is y d Governor was planning to slash workers salaries as soon as they embrace the idea by over 50% Rochas is a rogue 1 Like |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by brainpower(m): 1:55pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
I hate Nigeria's way of playing politics. What's wrong with resigning if you can't improve your state as promised? Anybody that wants to be a farmer should resign. Now they will sit at home for 4days out of 7days doing nothing just cos your wife or concubine made you promise her that you'll make such an absurd decision or whatever reason you have doing so. That's how PMB wants to suspend or laws just to get what he wants. Yet these laws are what brought him to power. There is something fundamentally wrong with this country. |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by kabrud: 1:58pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
ironheart:I just tire o! People must just oppose the govt. Could remember when CBN tagged some items 'obslolete' and decided to auction them at ridiculously low price to the low cadre staff (a functional deep freezer was sold at #50) some members of staff were just complaining upandan that they should have been given money to buy new ones as if seperate provision was made for the purchase of household items for staff. These items were bought brand new and these are the people that will still go to the market searching for tokumbo items even if they are given money for brand new ones. Meanwhile, this was done at the initiative of the Zonal Controller and they still bought as much as they could get. SMH. |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by RZArecta(m): 2:01pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
To improve an economy, you encourage SME's it's not just by shouting agriculture up and down like a demented goat 5 Likes 1 Share |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by toma3: 2:16pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
if government reduce their working hour would it affect their salary |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by AllTheWayUp: 2:19pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
Rochas Okorocha the mad man started this fake forced farming , because he couldn't pay civil servants, he told them to work for Monday to Wedensday and thus their monthly salaries will only cover Monday to Wedensday for every month, He has diverted Imo State monthly allocations, no wonder ghost is slapping him , he is in India as we speak, seeking spiritual treatment. 2 Likes |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by drnoel: 2:20pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
smellingmenses: Really? |
Re: You Cannot Force Workers Into Farming, Labour Tells Govs by princetom1(m): 2:23pm On Aug 22, 2016 |
ironheart:Thank u sir. When will our people have *common sense?* Instead of listening to the idea and see it will benefit them (more income, food security, job security, better welfare, less office work, less stress), they are shouting like trump, no brains. NLC, not better than agbero who uses his mouth instead of brain. Bunch of illeterate |
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