Why Ogun State Deserves Special Federal Intervention
Nigeria stands at a critical juncture in its quest for economic diversification, industrial expansion, and sustainable development. To move decisively forward, the nation must identify and empower strategic sub-national assets capable of delivering national impact. One such asset is Ogun State—a state whose strategic location, industrial strength, and educational depth make a compelling case for special federal intervention.
Ogun State: The Natural Extension of Lagos
Ogun State shares an extensive boundary with Lagos State, Nigeria’s economic powerhouse. As Lagos continues to grapple with congestion, infrastructure pressure, and limited expansion space, Ogun has organically emerged as the natural spillover and growth corridor.
Industries, logistics firms, and residential developments are steadily relocating into Ogun State, not by accident but by economic logic. Treating Ogun State as a Special State would enable the Federal Government to deliberately manage this spillover—decongesting Lagos while strengthening regional balance and national productivity.
Nigeria’s Quiet Industrial Powerhouse
Beyond geography, Ogun State has quietly evolved into Nigeria’s second most industrialised state. From Agbara to Ota, Sagamu to Ijebu-Ode, manufacturing plants—both multinational and indigenous—dot the state’s landscape.
These industries contribute significantly to employment, non-oil revenue, and export potential. Yet, the pace of industrial growth in Ogun has largely been driven by private investment, often constrained by power shortages, logistics bottlenecks, and infrastructure gaps.
Strategic federal interventions in electricity supply, rail connectivity, export processing zones, and industrial financing would transform Ogun into a full-scale manufacturing and export hub for Nigeria.
The Educational Capital of Nigeria
Ogun State is widely regarded as Nigeria’s educational capital, hosting the highest concentration of tertiary institutions in the country. Universities, polytechnics, and colleges within the state produce thousands of graduates annually—engineers, scientists, educators, and professionals who power Nigeria’s workforce.
This unique concentration creates an unparalleled opportunity for synergy between education and industry. With targeted federal support for research, innovation, technical education, and university-industry collaboration, Ogun could become Nigeria’s leading centre for skills development, applied research, and industrial innovation.
A Smart Investment, Not Preferential Treatment
Special federal intervention in Ogun State should not be misconstrued as favouritism. Rather, it is a strategic investment with national returns. Ogun already demonstrates strong internally generated revenue performance and economic resilience, making it a high-capacity partner for federal programmes.
Unlike intervention-dependent states, Ogun has the institutional and economic foundation to absorb, scale, and sustain federal investments—ensuring accountability and long-term impact.
National Benefits of Special Status
Designating Ogun State as a Special State for targeted federal interventions would:
- Reduce economic and infrastructural pressure on Lagos
- Strengthen Nigeria’s manufacturing base
- Accelerate job creation and skills development
- Boost non-oil exports and foreign exchange earnings
- Enhance Nigeria’s competitiveness within West Africa
In effect, what benefits Ogun ultimately benefits Nigeria.
A Call for Strategic Federal Action
The Federal Government of Nigeria has a historic opportunity to harness Ogun State’s strategic advantages for national development.
By formally recognising Ogun as a Special State for special interventions—particularly in infrastructure, industry, education, and logistics—the government can unlock a new growth frontier for the Nigerian economy.
Ogun State is not asking for special treatment; it is offering special value. The time has come to treat it as such.
Pastor Bayo Beckley
HND, BSc, ACA, FCIB, MSc
