Establishing Walmart In Lagos Will Kill Many Retail Businesses-- Workers Tell Ambode, Buhari
The Federation of Informal Workers’ Organizations of Nigeria (FIWON), representing millions of working people in the informal sectors of the Nigerian economy, has asked Walmart, the global retail trade giant, not to come and invest in Nigeria.
Despite the optimism by many, the workers argued that ordinary people
will suffer in the long run. The workers, in an open letter to
President Muhammadu Buhari and Governor Akinwumi Ambode of Lagos State,
signed by Gbenga Komolafe,
General Secretary, said they are concerned
because millions of retail businesses including street and market
vendors, some of who happen to be their members face the threat of being
displaced from business by this global behemoth.
Shelley Broader, President and Chief Executive Officer of Walmart
Incorporated Europe, Middle East, Africa and Canada recently paid a
visit to Governor Ambode in a quest to establish business presence in
Nigeria starting with Lagos. Ambode welcomed the Walmart executives
while pledging his commitment to create “an enabling environment” for
the global retail company because “the presence of the brand in Lagos
will go a long way not only to create jobs for our teeming youths, but
also to boost the economy of the state…”
However, the workers disagreed. According to them: “As it is,
millions of jobs have been lost in Nigeria in the last two decades as a
result of Nigeria’s extreme open market policy which has turned the
country to a dumping ground of, very often, fake, sub-substandard goods
from all over the world especially, in recent years, China. Given
Nigeria’s well known infrastructural deficiencies, Nigerian manufactured
goods stood no chance as hundreds of factories closed down, rendering
millions of Nigerians jobless or with low paying work in the informal
sectors of the economy.”
They added that today, in a city like Lagos, easily Nigeria’s most
industrialized enclave, over 80% of the working population scrape
subsistence in the informal economy, a significant percentage of this,
in retail trade in the neighbourhoods and the communities.
Walmart, renowned for its dismal record of systematically easing out
small time retailers in the communities because of its extremely low
wage, undercutting low pricing policy which is made possible by its
slave camp manufacturing plants in South East Asia, will, as the workers
argued, easily uproot local retailers and neighbourhood markets in
Lagos.
They said they were sure of the outcome because of Walmart’s bad
records in the United States of America and also across so many other
countries it operates in. Studies after studies have shown that while
Walmart offers some low paying jobs, it actually uproots several more
people from their retail business, than it offers its poverty wage jobs,
the workers revealed.
Pm News
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