"background": "The operational efficiency of transport maintenance depots is critical for infrastructure sustainability, yet robust empirical methodologies for its measurement in developing contexts are lacking. Prevailing assessments often rely on cross-sectional data, failing to capture dynamic efficiency gains over time. ", "purpose and objectives": "This study aims to methodologically evaluate the performance measurement of depot systems and to empirically estimate longitudinal efficiency gains using a panel-data framework. The objective is to quantify the impact of systematic interventions on depot productivity. ", "methodology": "A panel dataset was constructed from operational records of multiple depots. Efficiency was modelled using a fixed-effects regression: Y{it = \ + \ Xit + \ Tt +, where Yit is the output metric for depot i in period t, Xit is a vector of inputs, and Tt is a time trend. Robust standard errors were clustered at the depot level to account for heteroskedasticity and autocorrelation. ", "findings": "The analysis identified a statistically significant positive time trend, indicating an average annual efficiency gain of 7. 3% across the depots studied (95% CI: 5. 1% to 9. 5%). This gain was strongly associated with the phased implementation of standardised procurement and workshop scheduling systems. ", "conclusion": "The application of panel-data methods provides a superior, dynamic assessment of depot efficiency compared to static analyses. The results confirm that structured operational interventions can yield substantial and measurable improvements in maintenance output over time. ", "recommendations": "Depot managers and policymakers should adopt panel-data methodologies for performance monitoring. Investment should prioritise standardising procurement and workflow scheduling, as these drivers yielded the most significant efficiency returns. ", "key words": "infrastructure maintenance, efficiency analysis, panel data, fixed effects, operational research, asset management", "contribution statement": "This paper provides a novel application of econometric panel-data estimation to engineering
Ochieng et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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