In a bold diplomatic offensive, Edo State Governor, Senator Monday Okpebholo, has taken the state’s economic future into his own hands—making an audacious pitch to the world’s biggest investors at the 2025 IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington, D.C.
With a mission to unlock billions in foreign investment, Governor Okpebholo is charting a new path—replacing the outdated model of borrowing with a visionary strategy centered on investor confidence, equity partnerships, and fiscal transparency.
“This is not a begging bowl diplomacy,” said Fred Itua, the Governor’s Chief Press Secretary. “This is a leadership moment. Governor Okpebholo is telling the world that Edo is not just open for business—it is ready to lead Africa’s next economic story.”
At the heart of this new economic vision is a shift from debt-heavy development to targeted, sustainable investment in sectors like infrastructure, mining, agro-processing, housing, education, and SME growth.
The Governor’s Washington delegation—comprising Finance Commissioner Emmanuel Okoebor, renowned policy economist Taiwo Akerele, and Special Adviser Kizito Okpebholo—is aggressively engaging multilaterals, private equity firms, and global fund managers.
Their goal: to present Edo’s portfolio of shovel-ready projects to credible partners seeking real impact and returns.
The state also co-hosted the inaugural Multi-Sector Global Partnership Summit alongside Policy House International and ReadyToLead Africa—a strategic platform designed to connect Edo’s developmental vision with concrete foreign capital flows.
But this isn’t just about economics, it’s about resetting the perception of subnational governance in Nigeria.
Okpebholo is crafting a narrative of bold, data-driven leadership, where states take charge of their destinies through smart partnerships rather than dependence on federal allocations or foreign loans.
“Edo is not borrowing its way into the future,” Itua emphasized. “We’re building a new economy with real investment, not handouts.”
Edo is also angling for a strong share of the World Bank’s upcoming $50 billion Africa investment pipeline for 2025–2026—targeting infrastructure, social protection, education, and climate resilience through mechanisms like Investment Project Financing and Multilateral Investment Guarantees.
As global investors seek safe, forward-looking destinations in Africa, Okpebholo is making a calculated play to put Edo on the map—not just as a destination for investment, but as a model for subnational innovation.
The message is clear: Edo is not waiting for help—it’s creating opportunities, shaping policy, and going toe-to-toe with the world’s most sophisticated economies to secure a prosperous future for its people.
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