A Decision Under Structural Pressure



Not all decisions are operational.
Some are structural — once made, they cannot be reversed without failure.

This walkthrough shows how a seemingly straightforward project decision
becomes a structural risk.



Step 1 — Situation

A builder is offered a residential project under a fixed-price contract.

  • Timeline: 12–18 months
  • Pricing: locked at signing
  • Market condition: rising material and labour costs

The project appears commercially viable at the point of signing.

Step 2 — Collapse

Months into delivery:

  • material costs increase
  • labour availability tightens
  • delays begin to accumulate

Margins compress.
Cashflow tightens.
Multiple projects begin to overlap in stress.

The issue is no longer project-level.
It becomes systemic.

Step 3 — Governance

This outcome is not accidental.
It is shaped by the system:

  • Fixed-price contracts
  • Variable input costs
  • Staged payments tied to progress
  • Limited access to working capital

Policy allows it.
Capital enables it.
Contracts enforce it.

Step 4 — Risk Flow

Risk does not stay where it is created.
It moves.

  • from developer → builder
  • from builder → subcontractor
  • from subcontractor → labour

As pressure builds,
risk concentrates at the point of weakest absorption.

Step 5 — Decision

Surface decision:

→ Accept the project
→ Secure revenue

Structural decision:

→ Take on downstream risk
→ Absorb volatility without control

Alternative:

→ Refuse the project
→ Do not take on transferred risk
→ Do not stand in the risk-bearing position

Closing Statement

This is not a delivery decision.
It is a system impact decision.

Where risk moves determines
whether the decision is survivable.

Continue

→ Understand the structural model → Structural Framework

→ See how decisions are formed → Decision System

→ Apply this to your situation → Start a Conversation