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Poor Infrastructure Inflates Costs — Government Borrowing Isn’t the Only Issue

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Chinyere

Well-Known Member
Mar 23, 2026
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Even as the government borrows to fund development, the real cost pressure on everyday goods comes from infrastructure challenges. Take eggs, for example: poor road networks mean a lot get damaged before they even reach the market, pushing prices up.
So, while borrowing might be aimed at economic growth or projects, the impact of inadequate infrastructure is immediate and felt by both producers and consumers. Until roads, logistics, and market access improve, borrowing alone won’t solve the problem — it’s about efficient spending and delivery of critical infrastructure.
 
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Even as the government borrows to fund development, the real cost pressure on everyday goods comes from infrastructure challenges. Take eggs, for example: poor road networks mean a lot get damaged before they even reach the market, pushing prices up.
So, while borrowing might be aimed at economic growth or projects, the impact of inadequate infrastructure is immediate and felt by both producers and consumers. Until roads, logistics, and market access improve, borrowing alone won’t solve the problem — it’s about efficient spending and delivery of critical infrastructure.
Government borrowing, in itself, is not the problem. Every serious economy borrows. The real question is what the borrowed money translates into in the real economy.

When infrastructure is weak, the economy develops what professionals call “frictional costs”. These are invisible taxes that show up in everyday prices.
 
this is very true, lack of good roads, energy, eletricity, lack of clean watter will forever depeen the economy issue in Nigeria. As a result, it will hurt the nation form many angles. it also the number one cause of rising cost of food, and basic amenities. We need to fix this and whoever the president of Nigeria is going to be in 2027, he need to work hard at fixing this.
 
Even as the government borrows to fund development, the real cost pressure on everyday goods comes from infrastructure challenges. Take eggs, for example: poor road networks mean a lot get damaged before they even reach the market, pushing prices up.
So, while borrowing might be aimed at economic growth or projects, the impact of inadequate infrastructure is immediate and felt by both producers and consumers. Until roads, logistics, and market access improve, borrowing alone won’t solve the problem — it’s about efficient spending and delivery of critical infrastructure.
Your egg example is powerful because it captures this perfectly:

A farmer produces efficiently
But poor roads destroy part of the output
Transport becomes slower and more expensive
Losses are priced into what survives

So the final consumer is not just paying for eggs, they are paying for inefficiency, waste, and system failure.
 
Government borrowing, in itself, is not the problem. Every serious economy borrows. The real question is what the borrowed money translates into in the real economy.

When infrastructure is weak, the economy develops what professionals call “frictional costs”. These are invisible taxes that show up in everyday prices.
Yeah, borrowing isn’t inherently bad; it’s how the funds are deployed that matters. When money is invested in effective infrastructure, it can lower frictional costs, reduce losses, and increase efficiency across the economy. Poor roads, unreliable power, or weak supply chains act like invisible taxes — they increase production costs, raise prices for consumers, and limit business growth.