"background": "Municipal infrastructure in South Africa faces systemic challenges, with asset management systems often lacking robust, data-driven methodologies for quantifying risk reduction. This impedes effective policy formulation and resource allocation for critical engineering assets. ", "purpose and objectives": "This policy analysis evaluates methodological approaches for infrastructure asset systems and develops a panel-data econometric model to estimate the efficacy of municipal interventions in reducing infrastructure risk. ", "methodology": "A methodological critique of prevalent asset management frameworks is conducted. Subsequently, a balanced panel dataset for municipalities is constructed, analysing longitudinal data on asset condition, expenditure, and environmental stressors. The core specification is a two-way fixed effects model: Risk{it = \0 + \1Interventionit + \ + \ +, where \ and \ₜ represent municipality and year fixed effects, respectively. Inference is based on cluster-robust standard errors. ", "findings": "The methodological evaluation identifies a prevalent over-reliance on static condition assessments. The panel estimation reveals that targeted, preventative maintenance programmes are associated with a statistically significant reduction in aggregate infrastructure risk. A one-standard-deviation increase in such expenditure correlates with an approximate 15% decrease in the risk index (95% CI: 12% to 18%). ", "conclusion": "Current municipal asset management practices can be substantially enhanced through the adoption of dynamic, data-driven panel models. These provide a more rigorous evidence base for measuring the impact of risk reduction policies over time. ", "recommendations": "National policy should mandate the standardised collection of panel data for key infrastructure assets. Municipalities should integrate fixed effects panel models into their asset management decision-support systems to prioritise preventative interventions. ", "key words": "infrastructure asset management, panel data, fixed effects model, risk reduction, municipal engineering, policy evaluation", "contribution statement": "This article provides a novel methodological framework and the first panel-data estimation of infrastructure risk reduction
Nkosi et al. (Sun,) studied this question.