By Malliavin Nzamurambaho
The next test of Rwanda’s development model is not building more it is ensuring every franc creates value
For more than two decades, Rwanda has built a reputation as one of Africa’s most ambitious development stories. Roads, public buildings, technology infrastructure and urban projects have become visible symbols of a country determined to transform itself.
Infrastructure has been central to this strategy. A modern road network can reduce business costs. Efficient public facilities can improve service delivery. Strategic infrastructure can attract investment and strengthen competitiveness.
But as Rwanda enters a new phase of development, the central question is changing. The issue is no longer whether the country can build. The issue is whether what is built is delivering the economic returns expected.
This is Rwanda’s infrastructure paradox: significant investment has created impressive physical assets, yet concerns raised through public audits and oversight discussions suggest that weaknesses in planning, procurement, supervision and asset management may reduce the value of those investments.
For taxpayers, investors and policymakers, the question is fundamental:
Is infrastructure becoming a driver of productivity or an expensive obligation that requires continuous correction?
The Auditor General’s message: Public money requires public value
The Office of the Auditor General (OAG) occupies an important position in Rwanda’s public financial management system.
Its reports are not simply financial reviews. They provide insight into whether public investments are being managed efficiently and whether institutions are protecting national resources.
Recurring audit observations have pointed to challenges such as: inadequate feasibility studies before projects begin; weaknesses in procurement processes; poor contract management; insufficient technical supervision; incomplete or defective works; public assets that do not achieve their intended purpose.
The significance of these findings goes beyond individual projects. A delayed road is not only a delayed road. It can mean higher transport costs for businesses, reduced access for communities and slower economic activity.
An underused public building is not only an empty structure. It represents capital that could have been invested elsewhere.
The real cost of weak project management is therefore measured not only in money lost, but in opportunities missed.
Infrastructure is not construction it is long-term economic strategy
One of the most important lessons in infrastructure development is that completion does not equal success. A project may be finished on time and within budget, yet still fail to create the expected value.
A road that deteriorates years before its planned lifespan raises questions about the entire investment process: Was the original design adequate? Were materials selected according to quality standards? Was procurement focused on value rather than only price? Was supervision strong enough to detect problems early? Were contractors held accountable?
Infrastructure quality is rarely determined at the final construction stage. It is shaped from the beginning during planning, financing, contracting and monitoring.
A country can save money during construction and lose much more during operation. This is why the global shift in infrastructure thinking is moving from building assets to managing assets.
The public building question: Assets or financial burdens?
Government buildings represent long-term commitments. They require land, financing, maintenance budgets and operational planning. A successful public building is not simply one that is completed. It must improve efficiency, support institutions and provide measurable public benefit.
The challenge facing governments worldwide is that buildings can become expensive liabilities when they are not connected to clear operational needs. A building that remains underused creates three costs: The initial construction cost; The ongoing maintenance obligation; The lost opportunity to invest elsewhere;
The lesson is clear: public infrastructure must be evaluated through its entire lifecycle, not only through the moment of completion.
Procurement: Where infrastructure success begins
Many infrastructure problems are created before construction starts. Procurement decisions determine the quality, cost and sustainability of projects.
When procurement systems focus mainly on selecting the lowest bidder, governments risk creating short-term savings at the expense of long-term value. The cheapest contractor is not always the most economical choice. A lower initial price can lead to: poor-quality materials; delays; contract disputes; additional repairs; higher lifetime costs.
Modern public procurement must ask a broader question:
Which option delivers the greatest value over the lifetime of the investment?
This approach is especially important for countries seeking rapid economic transformation, where every public investment must generate maximum impact.
The economic cost of weak infrastructure management
The consequences of infrastructure failures spread across the economy. Businesses depend on reliable infrastructure to reduce costs and compete. Farmers depend on transport networks to access markets. Investors depend on predictable public systems. When infrastructure does not perform as expected, economic efficiency suffers.
The losses include:
Lower productivity
Poor infrastructure increases the cost of moving goods, people and services.
Reduced investor confidence
International investors look beyond individual projects. They assess the quality of national systems.
Pressure on public budgets
Money used for repairs and corrections cannot support new priorities.
Slower development impact
A country cannot sustain rapid growth if it repeatedly pays for avoidable mistakes.
The reform challenge: Moving from quantity to quality
Rwanda’s infrastructure ambition remains essential. But the next stage requires a stronger focus on value creation. Several priorities stand out.
Better project preparation
Large investments should begin only after strong analysis of: future needs; financial sustainability; risks; expected economic returns.
Stronger contractor accountability
Contracts should include clear performance requirements and consequences for failure.
Independent quality control
Supervision must be technically strong and sufficiently independent.
Better asset management
Public infrastructure should have clear plans for use, maintenance and performance measurement.
Turning Audit findings into action
The purpose of an audit is not only to identify problems. It is to improve systems. The greatest success is not discovering failure after completion, it is preventing failure before investment begins.
Rwanda’s Next infrastructure era must be about value
Rwanda’s infrastructure story is one of ambition and transformation. But the next chapter shall require a different measure of success. The question is no longer:
How much infrastructure can be built?
The question is:
How much lasting economic and social value can every public investment create?
A strong infrastructure system is not defined only by roads, buildings and facilities. It is defined by quality, efficiency, accountability and sustainability. For Rwanda, the future of infrastructure development will depend on turning lessons from audits into stronger institutions and better project management. Because the true measure of progress is not the amount of concrete poured. It is the value created long after construction is complete.
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