spot_img
spot_imgspot_img
September 17, 2025 - 5:27 AM

South-East Blew It: $5.6 Billion Walked Past Their Door

The numbers don’t lie — but sometimes, they slap hard.

In Q1 2025, Nigeria recorded over $5.6 billion in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). Lagos took the lion’s share. Abuja grabbed the rest. The South-East? Zilch. Not a dime. Not even pocket change.

Let that sink in.

This isn’t just another bad quarter. This is a cold-blooded reminder that the region once dubbed Nigeria’s industrial nerve centre is fast becoming an investment desert.

Where Are The Tigers?

In the 1980s and ‘90s, towns like Nnewi and Aba had the swagger of mini-Shenzhens. Nnewi earned the nickname “Japan of Africa” for churning out spare parts and assembling motorcycles with the precision of a Swiss watch. Aba’s Made-in-Aba market fed an entire ecosystem of textile and leather industries.

Fast forward to 2025 and the roar is gone. What you hear now is silence. Deafening, expensive silence.

You’d think a region with a tech-savvy population, massive diaspora capital, and historical industrial clout would be the first port of call for investors. Instead, they’re watching the billions zoom past — to Lagos, to Abuja, to anywhere but home.

This Ain’t Bad Luck. It’s Bad Leadership.

The South-East governors didn’t lose a bidding war. They never showed up to the table. No unified investment desk. No infrastructure incentives. No policy clarity. No marketing. No cohesive plan to woo capital. Just empty talk and ribbon-cutting.

While Lagos is busy setting up Lekki Deep Seaport, building rail corridors, and hosting global business expos, the South-East is hosting praise-singers and party loyalists.

Abuja, meanwhile, is positioning itself as a tech hub, attracting startup capital and regulatory sandbox opportunities. Anambra or Imo could have done the same. But when politics overshadows performance, everyone loses.

The Money Has Eyes — and Memory

Investors aren’t tourists. They don’t visit where they’re not invited. And they don’t stay where there’s no security, transparency, or vision.

In 2013, Innoson Motors, Nigeria’s first indigenous car manufacturer, was hailed as the future of African auto manufacturing. A decade later, the company still battles power supply issues and regulatory hostility — in its own backyard.

Tech hubs like Roar Nigeria in UNN and Genesys Tech Hub in Enugu showed promise. But without government support, they struggle for scale.

The world is moving at the speed of data. The South-East is stuck in committee meetings.

Time to Wake Up — or Get Left Behind

This isn’t just about dollars and cents. It’s about jobs, innovation, dignity, and survival.

Leadership must stop playing regional politics and start playing global economics. Partner with diaspora investors. Rebrand the region. Build roads. Guarantee power. Secure the streets. Roll out red carpets, not red tape.

Because next quarter, the money will move again.

And if nothing changes, the South-East won’t just miss out —
it may be written off.

 

Written By Linus Anagboso.

Tech| Columnist | Strategic Digital Communicator.

Linus Anagboso
Linus Anagboso
Linus Anagboso is a digital entrepreneur, strategic communicator, and the voice behind The Big Pen Unfilterd — a bold commentary platform known for cutting through noise and exposing truth. Beyond writing, Linus helps brands and changemakers craft powerful narratives, build authentic visibility, and grow influence through strategic communication, branding, and partnership-driven promotion. If you're ready to be seen, heard, and remembered — he's the strategist with the pen to match.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Share post:

Subscribe

Latest News

More like this
Related

The Political Class Versus Hilda Baci

Nigerian travelers to other parts of the world can...

Oborevwori Applauds PTI, Lokpobri for Historic Land Transfer

Governor Sheriff Oborevwori of Delta State has applauded the...

NECO to Release 2025 SSCE Internal Results September 17

The National Examinations Council (NECO) has announced that the...

Bida Poly Deploys Soldiers to Supervise Exams Amid Lecturers’ Strike

The management of the Federal Polytechnic, Bida, has deployed...
Join us on
For more updates, columns, opinions, etc.
WhatsApp
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x