March 2026
Across the United States,communities of every size are on the front lines of a rapidly changing climate, aging infrastructure, an affordability crisis, and rising expectations to deliver reliable, affordable services under increasingly growing fiscal pressures. Local leaders are being asked to do more often with limited staff, uncertain funding, and systems that were never designed for today’s conditions.
As mayor of Phoenix, I see these realities every day. Extreme heat, water scarcity, population growth, and economic competitiveness are not abstract challenges. They shape every infrastructure decision we make. We must balance difficult trade-offs, frequently with incomplete information and significant uncertainty. And Phoenix is not an outlier. Cities of all sizes, particularly small and midsized communities, carry so much of the responsibility for the infrastructure that underpins public health, safety, and economic opportunity across the country…
Jan 2025
The US Government has committed to help build a pipeline of quality infrastructure projects in low- and middle-income countries that contribute to inclusive, sustainable growth, and that attract private capital. This review focuses on the earliest stages of infrastructure project development and the enabling conditions within a country that contribute to the development of a pipeline of quality infrastructure projects. The authors offer recommendations on how to prioritize US foreign assistance in these early stages to improve the likelihood of drawing subsequent private-sector financing.
The report, created in collaboration with the Department of State and informed by key interviews with governmental and nongovernmental international infrastructure experts, provides general recommendations grounded in experience from prior foreign assistance resources and projects to address this growing global need…