Every city has two kinds of infrastructure.
The first is easy to see.
New roads. New bridges. New government buildings. Fresh paint. Construction sites. Ceremonial ribbon-cuttings. These projects appear in photographs, campaign materials, and official announcements. They provide visible proof that something is being built.
The second kind is harder to notice.
It exists in the reliability of electricity, the predictability of public transport, the efficiency of licensing offices, the quality of water supply, the management of traffic, the speed of customs clearance, and the consistency of public services.
One is visible. The other is functional.
And too often, governments focus on the first while neglecting the second.
This imbalance is not unique to Nigeria. It exists in many developing economies, where political incentives naturally favor projects that can be photographed, measured and publicly celebrated. A new flyover attracts attention in a way that improved traffic management rarely does. A newly commissioned building is easier to communicate than a better-maintained database.
Yet citizens experience government primarily through systems, not structures.
People rarely judge the quality of a city by the appearance of a government office. They judge it by how long it takes to renew a document, register a business, connect to electricity, clear goods through a port, or reach work on time.
The distinction matters because economic development depends increasingly on efficiency rather than visibility.
A business owner benefits more from predictable power supply than from an impressive administrative complex. A commuter benefits more from reliable transport than from another ceremonial infrastructure project. An investor is often more concerned with the speed of approvals than the architecture of the ministry issuing them.
Systems create confidence.
Confidence creates investment.
Investment creates growth.
The relationship is rarely as straightforward in the opposite direction.
Many African cities today present a striking contrast. New developments rise across urban skylines while citizens continue adapting to daily uncertainty. Businesses install generators. Households purchase water storage tanks. Drivers spend hours navigating congestion. Entrepreneurs learn to work around administrative delays.
In effect, private solutions emerge to compensate for public systems that remain weak.
This adaptation demonstrates resilience. But resilience should not be mistaken for efficiency.
A society becomes stronger when citizens can depend on systems rather than continuously inventing workarounds for their absence.
The challenge is that invisible systems are politically difficult. They require maintenance rather than inauguration. They produce gradual improvements rather than dramatic announcements. Success often appears as the absence of problems rather than the presence of achievements.
A functioning traffic-management system generates fewer headlines than a new highway. A modernized government database attracts less attention than a newly constructed office building.
Yet over time, these invisible improvements often contribute more to economic productivity than the projects that dominate public attention.
This is particularly important as African economies seek to attract investment, support entrepreneurship and compete in a rapidly changing global economy.
Investors notice reliability.
Businesses notice predictability.
Citizens notice efficiency.
And all three depend more on systems than symbols.
Visible projects matter. Roads, bridges, and public buildings are necessary components of development. The question is not whether governments should build them.
The question is whether equal attention is being given to the systems that determine how effectively those projects function once they are completed.
Because development is not measured only by what people can see. It is also measured by what no longer goes wrong.
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