"background": "Municipal infrastructure asset management in many developing nations is hampered by a lack of robust, quantitative methodologies for evaluating systemic risk and the efficacy of intervention programmes. Existing approaches often rely on cross-sectional data, failing to account for unobserved heterogeneity and temporal trends, which limits causal inference. ", "purpose and objectives": "This working paper presents a methodological evaluation framework for infrastructure asset systems. Its primary objective is to develop and demonstrate a quasi-experimental difference-in-differences (DiD) model to measure risk reduction attributable to structured municipal asset management programmes. ", "methodology": "A panel dataset of municipal infrastructure assets is constructed. The core analytical model is a two-way fixed effects DiD specification: Y{it = \ + \ (Treatmenti \ Postt) + + +, where Y₈ₓ is a composite risk index. Inference is based on cluster-robust standard errors at the municipal level to account for serial correlation. ", "findings": "The methodological application indicates a statistically significant reduction in the composite risk index for treated asset portfolios. The preliminary model estimates suggest a risk reduction on the order of 15–20 percentage points relative to control groups. The parallel trends assumption, critical for DiD validity, is tested and holds for the pre-intervention period. ", "conclusion": "The DiD model provides a rigorous methodological framework for quantifying the impact of asset management programmes on infrastructure risk, addressing key limitations of prior evaluation techniques. It demonstrates the value of causal inference methods in civil engineering asset management. ", "recommendations": "Municipal authorities and engineers should adopt quasi-experimental evaluation designs for infrastructure programmes. Future research should integrate more granular asset condition data and explore spatial dependencies in the error structure. ", "key words": "infrastructure asset management, difference-in-differences, risk reduction, causal inference, municipal engineering, panel data", "contribution statement": "This paper provides a
Mwakangata et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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