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{ "background": "Systemic risk in manufacturing plants, particularly in developing economies, presents a significant barrier to industrial growth and safety. Current risk assessment methodologies often rely on observational or self-reported data, which lack the rigour to establish causal effects of intervention programmes.", "purpose and objectives": "This policy analysis evaluates the application of a randomised field trial (RFT) methodology to measure the efficacy of a structured engineering risk-reduction programme in a Tanzanian manufacturing context. It aims to assess the methodological feasibility and to derive evidence-based policy insights.", "methodology": "A clustered randomised controlled trial was implemented across multiple manufacturing sites. Plants were randomly assigned to treatment (a multi-component engineering and procedural intervention) or control groups. The primary outcome was a composite risk score. Analysis used an intention-to-treat approach with a linear mixed model: $Y{ij} = \\beta0 + \\beta1 T{ij} + \\gamma X{ij} + uj + \\epsilon{ij}$, where $uj$ are cluster-level random effects. Robust standard errors were calculated.", "findings": "The RFT was successfully implemented, demonstrating methodological feasibility in this setting. The intervention group showed a statistically significant reduction in mean composite risk score (18.7 points, 95% CI: 12.3 to 25.1) compared to the control group, representing a 32% relative decrease. Key themes from process evaluation included the critical role of mid-level management engagement.", "conclusion": "Randomised field trials are a viable and powerful tool for generating high-quality evidence on engineering safety interventions in industrialising economies. The significant risk reduction observed underscores the potential of structured, systemic programmes.", "recommendations": "National industrial policy should incentivise the adoption of evidence-based, systemic risk management protocols. Regulatory bodies and industry associations should promote and provide guidance on the use of experimental methodologies for evaluating engineering safety programmes.", "key words": "randomised controlled trial, industrial safety, risk management, manufacturing, policy