THE COST OF IGNORING INFRASTRUCTURE REFORM.
Floods expose the hidden price of delayed planning and reactive governance
The recent floods are not just a humanitarian
crisis they are a clear economic warning. They reveal the long-term cost of
neglecting infrastructure reform. What we are witnessing is not simply the
result of heavy rainfall, but the outcome of delayed decisions, weak planning and a pattern of reactive policymaking. Flooded roads during the march 2026
rains disrupted transport and exposed weaknesses in urban drainage systems.https://www.the-star.co.ke/news/2026-03-07-photos-military-helps-clear-roads-after-heavy-rains
The effects have cut across key sectors of the
economy including agriculture, transport and trade. In agriculture, farms
have been submerged and crops destroyed, disrupting food production and
threatening livelihoods. This is likely to reduce food supply in the coming
months, pushing prices higher and raising concerns about both food security and
inflation. When infrastructure fails even basic systems like food supply
chains become unstable affecting not just farmers but entire communities.
When infrastructure fails, the economy doesn’t just
slow down, it absorbs the cost in ways that are often invisible but deeply felt.
A major issue highlighted by the floods is the high
cost of constant repairs. Roads, bridges and drainage systems require
significant funding after every major rainfall event. However repeatedly
repairing the same infrastructure instead of improving it reflects inefficiency
in both planning and resource allocation. In reality, it is far more costly to
keep fixing problems than to invest in long-term solutions that address the
root causes.
Residents clean up after flooding, highlighting the
recurring economic cost of rebuilding without long-term infrastructure reform.
At the center of this challenge is outdated and
inadequate infrastructure. Many drainage systems for instance are no longer
capable of handling current conditions. Rapid urban expansion, combined with
the growing effects of climate change has placed increased pressure on systems
that were never designed for such demand. Ignoring these changes only makes
future disasters more frequent and more expensive.
There is also a need for stricter enforcement of urban
planning regulations. Poor land use particularly construction in restricted or
high-risk areas alongside weak waste management systems continues to block
drainage channels and worsen flooding. Without proper enforcement and
accountability even well-designed infrastructure will struggle to perform
effectively.
At the same time public pressure is increasing.
Citizens are becoming more vocal in demanding accountability, transparency and
better decision-making from leaders. The expectation is no longer just quick
responses during disasters but long-term solutions that prevent such crises
from recurring.
From an economic perspective investing in
climate-resilient infrastructure is no longer optional it is essential. Such
investment is not only about preventing damage but also about protecting
livelihoods, supporting sustainable development and strengthening economic
resilience. Ignoring infrastructure reform does not eliminate costs it only
postpones them often making them even greater in the future.
The bottom line is floods serve as a powerful reminder that the
cost of inaction is far higher than the cost of reform. Without deliberate and
sustained investment in modern, efficient infrastructure the country risks
remaining trapped in a cycle of destruction, recovery, and repeated loss.
We better work on these now
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