Why Gwa Kiongo Dam Proves National Irrigation Authority Builds Lasting Prosperity
One of the oldest lessons in development economics is that markets alone rarely build the infrastructure that transforms poor rural regions into engines of prosperity. Private investors are often willing to finance a profitable harvest, purchase agricultural commodities, or trade in food markets, yet they are far less willing to fund dams, irrigation systems, spillways, pumping stations, and reticulation networks whose returns are dispersed across entire communities and realized over many years. This is a classic public goods problem, and history repeatedly demonstrates that when governments fail to intervene, rural economies become trapped in cycles of low productivity, climate vulnerability, and persistent poverty. That reality matters profoundly in contemporary Kenya, where climate variability has become one of the defining economic challenges of our time. Farmers who depend exclusively on rainfall are increasingly exposed to asymmetric climate shocks. A delayed rainy season, an ext...