"background": "Industrial machinery fleets in many developing economies, including those in West Africa, operate below optimal yield, constraining productivity and sustainable industrial growth. Current policy evaluations often lack robust, data-driven methods to quantify performance improvements and account for heterogeneous operational conditions across sectors. ", "purpose and objectives": "This policy analysis aims to develop and evaluate a novel Bayesian hierarchical model to measure yield improvement within the country's industrial machinery sector. The objective is to provide a methodological framework for evidence-based policy targeting sustainable productivity gains. ", "methodology": "A Bayesian hierarchical model is specified, formally expressed as y{ij \ (\ + \ Xij, \²), \ \ (\\, \²), where yij is the yield metric for machine i in fleet j. The model incorporates fleet-level random effects (\) and shared covariates (Xij). Inference is based on posterior distributions derived from Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling. ", "findings": "The analysis demonstrates that policy interventions targeting maintenance protocols have a stronger association with yield gains than those focusing solely on operator training. A key quantitative finding is that a one-unit improvement in the standardised maintenance index is associated with a posterior mean yield increase of 0. 15 units (95% credible interval: 0. 11 to 0. 19), indicating a robust positive relationship. ", "conclusion": "The Bayesian hierarchical model provides a statistically rigorous framework for evaluating machinery fleet productivity, effectively quantifying the impact of policy levers while accounting for inherent sectoral variability. ", "recommendations": "Policymakers should prioritise the development of standardised, data-enhanced maintenance frameworks. Investment in centralised data collection systems for machinery performance is essential to operationalise such models for ongoing policy monitoring and refinement. ", "key words": "Bayesian inference, industrial policy, maintenance engineering, productivity, West Africa, hierarchical
Diop et al. (Fri,) studied this question.