"background": "The resilience of manufacturing infrastructure in Uganda is critical for economic development, yet systematic, data-driven methodologies for assessing and mitigating operational risks in plant systems are lacking. Existing approaches often rely on cross-sectional data, failing to capture dynamic risk factors over time. ", "purpose and objectives": "This policy analysis evaluates methodological frameworks for risk assessment and develops a panel-data estimation model to quantify the efficacy of engineering and policy interventions aimed at reducing systemic risk in manufacturing plants. ", "methodology": "A longitudinal dataset of plant-level operational and safety indicators was constructed. The core analysis employs a two-way fixed effects panel model: Risk{it = \0 + \1 Interventionit + \ + \ +, where Riskit is a composite risk index. Inference is based on cluster-robust standard errors to account for heteroskedasticity and within-plant serial correlation. ", "findings": "The model indicates a statistically significant negative relationship between structured safety interventions and the composite risk index. A one-unit increase in intervention intensity is associated with an estimated 0. 15 standard deviation reduction in risk (95% CI: 0. 09 to 0. 21). The integration of real-time monitoring data proved a key theme for enhancing predictive accuracy. ", "conclusion": "Panel-data methods provide a superior, evidence-based framework for evaluating risk reduction in industrial settings, capturing unobserved heterogeneity and temporal trends that simpler methodologies miss. ", "recommendations": "Policymakers and engineering regulators should mandate the collection of panel data for high-hazard plants. Investment should be directed towards integrated monitoring systems to feed these models, enabling proactive, data-informed safety governance. ", "key words": "infrastructure resilience, panel data, fixed effects, risk assessment, industrial safety, policy evaluation", "contribution statement": "This article provides a novel application of econometric panel models to engineering safety policy, demonstrating a replicable methodology for quantifying the impact of interventions
Lubwama et al. (Fri,) studied this question.