"Recent articles in the New York Times and Bloomberg have asked why so many U.S. transportation projects suffer large cost overruns. The Manhattan Institute responded by pointing out that, even before the cost overruns, American transportation projects cost far more than projects in other countries.
These and other reviews of transportation spending miss two key points. First, it is not transportation projects that are expensive, but transit projects. The United States still builds highways at pretty reasonable costs ranging from about $2 million per lane‐mile in rural areas to $15 million in major urban areas. By comparison, the average light‐rail line now being planned or under construction costs $209 million per route‐mile (which is physically equal to about two lane‐miles).
The average cost of light‐rail construction per route‐mile has increased more than five times since the 1990s. Costs haven’t grown as much in the 2020s, but the decade isn’t over yet. Source: Federal Transit Administration cost reports.Second, U.S. transit construction costs are not only much higher than in other countries, they are much higher than in the United States just a few decades ago. In the 1990s, the average cost of light‐rail construction was (in today’s dollars) $44 million per route‐mile. That’s still not cost‐effective considering that freeway lanes were much less expensive and moved far more people and freight each day, but a lot more reasonable than $209 million per mile. Highway costs have also risen, but by only 40 percent or so after adjusting for inflation.
So the real question should be: why has transit construction gotten so expensive in the past two or three decades? I explore this question in detail in a recent policy brief, but in a nutshell the answer is that transit advocates have successfully persuaded many politicians and voters to spend endless amounts of money on transit without ever questioning whether transit produces any transportation benefits. As a result, few people notice that transit agencies in 2019 spent $1.38 for every passenger‐mile they carried while Americans spent only about 26 cents per passenger‐mile driving their automobiles.
Transit fares averaged 30¢ per passenger‐mile in 2019 and subsidies added another $1.08. By comparison, Americans spent about 25¢ per passenger‐mile driving their cars and highway subsidies added another penny. See this blog post for how I calculated these numbers.The transit lobby or, as I call it, the transit‐industrial complex, includes rail contractors, transit vehicle manufacturers, transit unions, transit agencies, and environmental groups. (Note that transit riders are not listed as they aren’t well organized.) Economist Mancur Olson would have called this group a distributional coalition, which, he said, worked not to increase economic productivity but to redistribute it.
Transit advocates are totally upfront about this. They oppose new highways because more people will use them. They call this induced demand, but I call it increased economic productivity. Instead, they want transit subsidies to “get people out of their cars,” meaning they want to reduce economic productivity by replacing low‐cost transportation with high‐cost transportation.
In 1982, the transit lobby persuaded Congress to divert a share of highway‐user fees to transit; since then, 20 percent of all gas tax increases have gone to transit. In 1991, the transit‐industrial complex convinced Congress to create a multi‐billion‐dollar slush fund for building new transit infrastructure. Transit agencies successfully persuaded the Federal Transit Administration to hand out these funds without regard to the cost‐effectiveness of projects. The result was that transit agencies gold‐plated their projects in order to be eligible for more federal funds.
In 2008, Congress departed from its historic policy of limiting highway and transit spending to the amount of revenues collected from highway users. Since then, Congress has spent $10 billion to $15 billion a year more on surface transportation than highway revenues (see the “Net Transfers” column), which just happens to approximate the amount it spends on transit.
This was compounded during the pandemic, when three COVID relief bills passed by Congress dedicated 65 percent of transportation funds (see table on pp. 5–8) to public transit systems that were carrying only about half a percent of passenger travel and no freight. The recent infrastructure bill gave transit an added $40 billion without any expectation that ridership will ever recover to 2019 levels.
All of these actions have given transit agencies a clear signal: spend as much as possible because few will ever question whether that spending is justified by the transportation benefits. The transit lobby is even upfront about that, arguing in a report published last month by the American Public Transportation Association that transit should no longer be judged by the number of people it carries but by “social equity” concerns, meaning subsidies should be increased even more to give a few low‐income people heavily discounted or even free transit rides.
(The reality is that transit does low‐income people more harm than good: 95 percent of people earning under $25,000 per year don’t take transit to work, while more than 75 percent of the taxes used to support transit are regressive. But the transit‐industrial complex seems to be immune to such facts.)
Will it ever be possible to overcome the transit‐industrial complex and return U.S. transportation policy to sanity? Mancur Olson thought that the power of distributional coalitions would be overturned only by some major crisis such as losing a war. We better hope it doesn’t come to that as we need to end transportation policies that assume it is better to spend money on transportation modes that most Americans never use than on ones that we use every day."
Monday, December 27, 2021
How the United States Wastes Transportation Dollars
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