National Review on transportation reform

by Mike Warren on February 2, 2009

Thanks to the Leadership Institute, my fraternity house receives National Review every fortnight. It’s a nice perk for living in a frat house, I’ll admit.

The latest issue features a symposium for 12 experts and writers on issues that the GOP can take leadership on for helping the middle class. It’s an interesting read throughout, but I was particularly interested in Tyler Duvall’s take on traffic congestion. Duvall was an official in George W. Bush’s Department of Transportation, and he continues the conversation on ways to relieve the pressure of high volume traffic on America’s metropolitan roadways. It’s a conversation I’ve been particularly interested in here on Vandy Right from time to time. I’ve copied the piece after the jump.

Of the major problems in America that affect the middle class, traffic congestion is perhaps the most solvable. While the media discussion of transportation has focused on “crumbling infrastructure,” the bigger drain on middle-class prosperity is highway congestion in America’s metropolitan areas. The Texas Transportation Institute’s 2007 Urban Mobility Report showed that Americans spend a whopping 4.2 billion hours per year sitting in traffic — up dramatically in the last 25 years.

This does not even take into account the costs associated with growing uncertainty about travel times, distortion of real-estate markets, wasted fuel, increases in emissions, and diminished access to job centers. Instead of spending time with their families, participating in civic life, or investing in their careers, millions of middle-class Americans are stuck sitting in cars.

The root cause of congestion is quite simple: Prices aren’t set to balance supply and demand. Imagine if consumers paid the government a weekly food tax that permitted them to take all the food they wanted from any grocery store. This policy would create massive food shortages. Yet, by and large, that’s how we pay for highways in America. As long as highway prices have little to do with highway costs, congestion will be inevitable.

Recently, however, serious cracks in status-quo defeatism have emerged. Thanks to technology breakthroughs, such as electronic toll tags and stickers, most major metropolitan areas are now in the process of implementing state-of-the-art, variable time-of-day road-pricing programs. The projects completed to date reveal four critical points: 1) variable pricing immediately and sustainably reduces congestion; 2) the more road space you price, the cheaper the price; 3) most drivers love the experiments once they’re implemented; and 4) pricing can be installed on a road in a matter of months.

With a growing body of research and real-world demonstrations, policymakers now have a firm foundation on which to build. Pricing policies can be flexibly integrated with mass-transit investments, targeted subsidies to low-income people, and tax cuts. In addition, pricing can attract private-sector debt and equity capital to upgrade infrastructure. Implementation is sometimes tricky, and it requires a lot of data to get the pricing right. But very few other policies can achieve so many “wins” as variable pricing can when properly designed.

Mr. Duvall was acting undersecretary for policy in the Department of Transportation in the George W. Bush administration.

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