NATIONAL
Union of Food, Beverages and Tobacco Employees, NUFBTE, has raised the alarm
that automated machines and robots are increasingly taking over the jobs of
members across the country, worsening the employment crisis in the country.
Machine and robots The union is concerned that if not checked, more Nigerians
may be thrown into the unemployment market.
The union has already petitioned
the Federal Government through the Minister of Labour and Employment over the
matter. Speaking, President of the union, Lateef Oyelekan, said the present
drive by the multinationals operating in Nigeria to use robots instead of human
beings, would soon boomerang as it would further increase the unemployment
figure in the country. He said: “Nigeria is not mature enough for automated
machine or robots to be used in our local industry instead of people.
Presently, we have the challenge of unemployment in our hands where half of the
population of our youths are unemployed. We are insisting that it would further
increase the unemployment problem in the country and more Nigerians will lose
their jobs.
This is because where 200 Nigerians are supposed to be working,
with automated machine, we now have 30, and where 500 were working before, we
have less than 50.” Calling on the Federal Government to prevail on the
companies already using robots to stop, he argued that “countries with
employment problems in the world are not using robots.
If a country like China
that manufactures robots is not using them, India is not using robots, even in
our continent here, Ghana and Kenya are not using robots, why should Nigeria
allow it then?” Oyelekan also said though the directive by President Muhammadu
Buhari that jobs Nigerians can do should not be given to expatriates, was
commendable, he insisted that the government must urgently make a pronouncement
on the robots issue. “This is how Nigeria can develop.
We commend Mr. President
for that because in some companies, we have expatriates as line managers, sales
managers, what does such a person know about our culture, our market and other
socio-cultural values of our people?” he asked. The NUFBTE president also
called on the Federal Government to reconsider its position on the upward
review of the excise duty on alcoholic beverages and tobacco. Noting that
government must be seen to be formulating policies that would secure jobs and
guarantee more employment, Oyelekan warned that over 20,000 jobs might be lost
to the recent increase in excise duty.Read much more at source:
https://www.vanguardngr.com/2018/03/automated-machine-robots-taking-jobs-labour-cries/
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