Special Reports

THE WORKING POOR: WHY MILLIONS OF NIGERIANS ARE EMPLOYED YET TRAPPED IN POVERTY

Oche Nehi

There was a time in Nigeria when securing a job marked the beginning of a better life. Employment meant stability, dignity, and hope. Parents sacrificed everything to educate their children because they believed a certificate would open the door to prosperity. That social contract has now been broken.

Today, millions of Nigerians rise before dawn, endure hours of traffic, work eight to twelve hours daily, and still return home unable to provide decent meals, pay school fees, settle rent, or save for tomorrow. They are not unemployed. They are not lazy. They are victims of an economy that increasingly punishes honest labour while rewarding political privilege.
Nigeria has quietly created a new class of citizens the WORKING POOR.
This silent emergency deserves as much national attention as unemployment, insecurity, and corruption because it is gradually eroding the dignity of work itself.
Across ministries, hospitals, schools, banks, factories, media houses, security agencies, and private businesses, countless workers now live from one salary to the next. For many, the salary is exhausted within days of payment. The remaining weeks are financed through borrowing, cooperative societies, digital loan apps, family support, or pure endurance.

The consequences are visible everywhere.

  1. A teacher who educates the nation’s future cannot afford quality education for her own children.
  2. A nurse entrusted with saving lives struggles to pay hospital bills when illness strikes her family.
  3. A police officer charged with protecting society battles to feed his household.
  4. A journalist exposing corruption cannot afford decent housing.
  5. A junior civil servant, after paying rent, transportation, electricity bills, food, and other essentials, is left with little or nothing before the next payday.

These are not isolated stories. They represent a growing national reality.
The tragedy is that Nigerians are working harder than ever before, but getting poorer with every passing year.

The reasons are not difficult to identify. Inflation has steadily reduced the value of wages. Food prices have reached levels unimaginable just a few years ago. Transportation costs have surged. House rents continue to climb in major cities. Electricity tariffs and other basic living expenses consume increasing portions of household income. Yet salaries particularly in the public sector and among lower-income workers in the private sector have failed to keep pace with these rising costs. The result is predictable: employment no longer guarantees economic security.
This should alarm every policymaker.

When workers can no longer afford the basic necessities of life despite full-time employment, productivity declines, corruption becomes more tempting, brain drain accelerates, and public confidence in government weakens.

Perhaps the greatest danger psychological. A generation that believes hard work no longer leads to progress is a generation that begins to lose faith in legitimate enterprise. It is no coincidence that more young Nigerians now dream of leaving the country than building careers within it. They are not simply chasing higher salaries abroad; they are searching for societies where effort is rewarded and work restores dignity.

At SecretsReporters, we believe this crisis cannot be separated from governance. While governments at various levels have introduced reforms intended to stabilize the economy and improve public finances, ordinary Nigerians continue to judge success by what happens in their kitchens, not by what appears in policy documents. Economic reforms that fail to translate into improved living conditions will inevitably face questions from the citizens they are meant to benefit.

This is why accountability must extend beyond budget speeches and official statistics. It must answer a more fundamental question:

Why are Nigerians working harder but living poorer? The answer demands honesty. It requires confronting inflation, improving productivity, investing in affordable public transportation, expanding access to quality healthcare and housing, supporting businesses that create decent jobs, and ensuring that wage policies reflect the real cost of living.

It also requires government at every level to recognise that development cannot be measured solely by infrastructure projects or macroeconomic indicators. A nation succeeds when ordinary workers can afford food, educate their children, access healthcare without financial ruin, and retire with dignity.

Employment should be the strongest weapon against poverty not another expression of it.

The working poor are not asking for luxury. They are asking for fairness. They seek an economy where honest work can provide a decent life and where sacrifice is rewarded with opportunity rather than perpetual hardship. Nigeria cannot continue to celebrate employment figures while ignoring the quality of life of those who are employed. A job that cannot feed a family, pay rent, or meet basic human needs is no longer a pathway out of poverty it is evidence of a deeper structural failure.

As this newspaper has consistently maintained, the true wealth of any nation is not measured by the fortunes of a privileged few but by the dignity enjoyed by its ordinary citizens. The millions of Nigerians who keep this country running teachers, nurses, artisans, factory workers, journalists, drivers, civil servants, farmers, traders, and security personnel deserve more than applause for their resilience. They deserve an economy that values their labour. The greatest injustice in today’s Nigeria is not merely that many people cannot find jobs.
It is that millions who already have jobs are still living in poverty.

That should trouble every leader. And it should trouble every Nigerian.