Reuters
Zimbabwe's public sector workers have accepted a 140 per cent salary
hike starting this month, a union official said on Wednesday, averting a
potential strike against President Emmerson Mnangagwa's government.
Soaring inflation has eroded salaries and savings in the... southern
African nation, which is grappling with its worst economic crisis in a
decade, marked by shortages of foreign exchange, food, fuel, electricity
and medicines.
Earlier this month, the top public workers union Apex Council rejected a
government offer to double pay for employees saying it was too little.
After another round of negotiations which dragged into the early hours
of Wednesday, an Apex Council official said workers had accepted a pay
deal that would see the lowest paid state employees getting 2,450
Zimbabwe dollars ($146) a month, up from 1,033.
"This increase does not meet our demand but we will take it while we
continue pushing the government to pay an increase that is above
inflation," said an Apex official, declining to be named because he is
not authorised to speak to the press.
Labour Minister Paul Mavima could not be reached for comment.
With year-on-year inflation estimated at 520 per cent in December by
economists and the local currency losing value, life is increasingly
hard for ordinary Zimbabweans, who also have to contend with the effects
of a devastating drought last year.
That has sapped any hope of an economic rebound promised by Mnangagwa when he was elected in a disputed election in 2018.
Pages
Wednesday, January 29, 2020
Zimbabwe public workers accept 140% pay hike, seek more
Reuters
Zimbabwe's public sector workers have accepted a 140 per cent salary
hike starting this month, a union official said on Wednesday, averting a
potential strike against President Emmerson Mnangagwa's government.
Soaring inflation has eroded salaries and savings in the... southern
African nation, which is grappling with its worst economic crisis in a
decade, marked by shortages of foreign exchange, food, fuel, electricity
and medicines.
Earlier this month, the top public workers union Apex Council rejected a
government offer to double pay for employees saying it was too little.
After another round of negotiations which dragged into the early hours
of Wednesday, an Apex Council official said workers had accepted a pay
deal that would see the lowest paid state employees getting 2,450
Zimbabwe dollars ($146) a month, up from 1,033.
"This increase does not meet our demand but we will take it while we
continue pushing the government to pay an increase that is above
inflation," said an Apex official, declining to be named because he is
not authorised to speak to the press.
Labour Minister Paul Mavima could not be reached for comment.
With year-on-year inflation estimated at 520 per cent in December by
economists and the local currency losing value, life is increasingly
hard for ordinary Zimbabweans, who also have to contend with the effects
of a devastating drought last year.
That has sapped any hope of an economic rebound promised by Mnangagwa when he was elected in a disputed election in 2018.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
No comments :
Post a Comment