May 03, 2026
11 11 11 AM
‘Critical deadline’: Trump running out of time as more Republicans break ranks
Stagnant wages leave Nigerian workers trailing peers  – Businessday NG
Defense industry flooding Congress with money with ‘millions’
Naira records marginal gain as FX liquidity hits $10bn in April – Businessday NG
Hiring freezes loom as business confidence remains near record low
Trump did ‘the worst thing a president could do’ — and voters won’t be quick to forgive
CBN tightens governance grip after bank recapitalisation push – Businessday NG
Frustrations soar among key Trump voting blocs — with no end in sight
Twilight zone: Markets await ‘highly uncertain’ interest rates decision
How Nigeria’s new retail class is turning local production into market power – Businessday NG
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‘Critical deadline’: Trump running out of time as more Republicans break ranks Stagnant wages leave Nigerian workers trailing peers  – Businessday NG Defense industry flooding Congress with money with ‘millions’ Naira records marginal gain as FX liquidity hits $10bn in April – Businessday NG Hiring freezes loom as business confidence remains near record low Trump did ‘the worst thing a president could do’ — and voters won’t be quick to forgive CBN tightens governance grip after bank recapitalisation push – Businessday NG Frustrations soar among key Trump voting blocs — with no end in sight Twilight zone: Markets await ‘highly uncertain’ interest rates decision How Nigeria’s new retail class is turning local production into market power – Businessday NG
Stagnant wages leave Nigerian workers trailing peers  – Businessday NG

Stagnant wages leave Nigerian workers trailing peers  – Businessday NG

Tunde Alabi, a fuel attendant in Lagos, earns the national minimum wage of N70,000 ($44) a month — an income that barely lasts two weeks. By the time he pays for transport to work, contributes to food at home, and buys essentials, there is almost nothing left. “You just survive,” he said. “Saving is not even something you think about.” His experience reflects a broader reality across Africa’s most populous nation, where low wages combined with rising inflation have eroded purchasing power and pushed workers into a daily struggle to meet b

Tunde Alabi, a fuel attendant in Lagos, earns the national minimum wage of N70,000 ($44) a month — an income that barely lasts two weeks. By the time he pays for transport to work, contributes to food at home, and buys essentials, there is almost nothing left. “You just survive,” he said. “Saving is not even something you think about.” His experience reflects a broader reality across Africa’s most populous nation, where low wages combined with rising inflation have eroded purchasing power and pushed workers into a daily struggle to meet b

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