"background": "Municipal infrastructure systems in many developing nations face chronic reliability challenges, yet longitudinal, system-level performance data and robust analytical frameworks for their assessment are scarce. This impedes evidence-based asset management and investment planning. ", "purpose and objectives": "This study aims to develop and evaluate a methodological framework for quantifying the reliability of integrated municipal infrastructure systems. Its objective is to estimate system-wide reliability trends and identify key determinants using a longitudinal dataset. ", "methodology": "A panel-data econometric model is employed, analysing a novel, author-compiled dataset covering water supply, sanitation, road networks, and public lighting across multiple municipalities. The core reliability metric is modelled using a fixed-effects estimator: R{it = \ + \ Xit + \ +, where Rit is the composite reliability index for municipality i in period t, \ denotes municipality fixed effects, Xit is a vector of time-varying covariates, and \ₜ represents period effects. Inference is based on robust standard errors clustered at the municipal level. ", "findings": "System reliability exhibited a statistically significant negative trend over the study period, with an average annual decline of 1. 7 percentage points (95% CI: -2. 3 to -1. 1). The analysis identified capital expenditure volatility and institutional fragmentation as the most substantial negative predictors of reliability, whereas targeted operation and maintenance investments showed a positive, albeit diminishing, marginal return. ", "conclusion": "The methodological framework provides a replicable tool for systemic infrastructure assessment. The results indicate a concerning degradation in the performance of municipal infrastructure systems, driven more by institutional and financial management factors than by asset age alone. ", "recommendations": "Municipal authorities should prioritise stabilising capital budgets and strengthening integrated, cross-asset management protocols. National policy should incentivise data-driven performance monitoring and ring-fence funding for routine maintenance. ", "key words": "infrastructure
Diop et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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