Anambra Economic Sector Budgetary Analysis: A Leap For Industrial Growth (Part Two) 

CHRISTIAN ABURIME

Of all the sectoral increases in Governor Chukwuma Charles Soludo’s ₦757.9 billion “Changing Gears 3.0” budget, none carries more game-changing weight than the 26.7% year-on-year surge for the Economic Sector. This obviously goes beyond just an incremental boost to prove resolutely that Anambra is deliberately pivoting from a commercial-trading hub into a full-blown industrial and innovation powerhouse.

 

After three-and-a-half years of laying foundations (roads, security, power sector reform, ease-of-doing-business improvements), 2026 is the year the state begins to harvest the economic dividends of those investments. The 26.7% increase is the financial ignition key for the next phase of Anambra’s journey towards becoming the “African Dubai-Taiwan-Silicon Valley” hybrid envisioned in the Anambra Vision 2070 plan.

 

While the final line-by-line breakdown will be published after passage by the State House of Assembly, the Governor’s speech and supporting facts point to five flagship destinations for the expanded Economic Sector allocation. One is Anambra Mixed-Use Industrial City, with
ground-breaking and Phase-1 infrastructure (access roads, power sub-stations, fibre backbone), which will commence in 2026. This is a 5,000+ hectare planned city designed for heavy and light manufacturing, logistics, and agro-processing clusters with dedicated power and rail spurs.

 

Next comes the three New Cities Project, namely Awka 2.0 (administrative and knowledge capital extension), Greater Niger (agro-industrial and river-port city) and Aerotropolis / New Industrial-Commercial City (around the international cargo and passenger airport). The year 2026 will mark the shift from master-planning to actual earth-moving and serviced-plot allocation.

 

Not to be left behind is Solution Innovation District (SID) Completion & Operationalisation.
The iconic SID building will reach the finishing stage in 2026, while the surrounding 100-hectare district begins private-sector plot allocation. The expanded budget will fund anchor-tenant incentives, venture funds, and the Anambra Angel Investment Network.

 

For Ease of Doing Business and Investment Promotion, a dedicated N10-15 billion (estimated) sub-head will finance international investment roadshows, sector-specific incentive packages (five to ten-year tax holidays for pioneer industries), and the operational take-off of the Anambra State Investment Promotion and Protection Agency (ANSIPPA) in its upgraded form.

 

Regenerative Agriculture and Export Value Chains will gain traction. This involves the continuation and scaling of the oil-palm, coconut, ukwa, and bamboo revolutions, plus new investments in cashew, citrus, and aquaculture processing zones. The budget will support off-taker agreements, cold-chain logistics, and the completion of the Oba Coordinated Wholesale Drug & Medical Equipment Market (Africa’s future largest pharm hub).

 

Following the foregoing investments, the expected positive impact on state development will be remarkable.
The Industrial City and three new cities alone are projected to create over 200,000 direct and indirect jobs within the 2026-2030 horizon. Add SID-driven tech jobs and agro-processing plants, and Anambra will move from net exporter of talent to net importer.

 

A thriving industrial base will dramatically widen the tax net. PAYE from new factories, withholding tax on contracts, property tax from new cities, and consumption taxes from rising middle-class spending will push Anambra’s IGR far beyond the chronic ₦2-3 billion monthly plateau it has battled for years.

 

Anambra’s economy has historically been 70-80% trade-driven. The 2026 investments will raise the manufacturing and innovation contribution from the current single-digit percentage toward 25-30% by 2030, making the state far more resilient to national economic shocks.

 

With world-class industrial and innovation infrastructure coming online, Anambra sons and daughters in London, Houston, and Johannesburg will finally have compelling reasons to return or invest heavily at home.
What’s more, neighbouring states will increasingly depend on Anambra for finished goods, tech services, wholesale pharmaceuticals, and cargo movement once the airport and rail masterplan mature.

 

The 26.7% increase is the moment Anambra stops being a state people pass through on their way to somewhere else and becomes the destination itself. It is the budget line that will determine whether the Soludo administration is remembered only as the best road-builder in Anambra’s history or as the leader who finally industrialised the state.

Everything the administration has done since 2022 was prologue. The expanded 2026 Economic Sector vote is Act One of the real economic miracle.
When historians write the story of how Anambra became one of Africa’s top ten sub-national economies by 2040, they will point to this 26.7% leap as the precise moment the gear truly shifted under Governor Chukwuma Charles Soludo …Oluatuegwu!!

Indeed, for Ndi Anambra, the future is bright and promising.

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