How Nigeria's Economic Geography Forces Migration to Lagos

Nigeria's economic concentration in Lagos is not accidental. It is a deliberate structural arrangement that serves capital accumulation by stripping value from the rest of the country and centralizing it in one city. Every major corporate headquarters, key infrastructure, and critical public service has been systematically located in Lagos, leaving other regions economically hollowed out.

The mechanism is straightforward. People in their home regions often have access to land, can grow their own food, and pay little or no rent. They are not desperate. But when economic activity is concentrated elsewhere and basic infrastructure is withheld from their communities, survival compels them to migrate. Once in Lagos, they arrive without land, without food security, and without shelter, making them entirely dependent on wages to meet needs they previously met for free. This is precisely the condition capitalism requires: people desperate enough to accept any terms of labor.

The concentration of insecurity across other regions compounds this. It is not incidental that violence and instability tend to be worse outside Lagos. Insecurity accelerates displacement and makes staying home untenable, functioning as another mechanism that pushes people toward the city.

This is not a natural economic outcome. It is an engineered one. Understanding it requires looking at Nigeria's economic geography not as the result of market forces finding their own level, but as a system deliberately designed to manufacture a surplus of desperate labor in one place, for the benefit of those who own capital in that place.

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