It doesn't hurt to do some calculations, but I doubt if you'll ever get a useful model.
In the case of the SF Muni, the main reason to look at privatization isn't directly cost, but to replace the union whose members don't even show up 33% of the time despite 6-figure salaries even for ticket booth operators.
The Caltrain was privately operated, until it was dropped by the railway and it became a publicly-operated service (it's essential for Stanford U. staff and students, and reducing 101 and 280 highway traffic, so simply can't be discontinued. But wifi is optional, so it doesn't have it.)
Any implication that public transition should be profitable is pernicious.
If you look at a system like BART or the New York subway system, the system provides value for the whole of the city and so everyone, notably employers, should pay for it.
I think Strong Towns were the ones who noted that transit system expected to "pull their weight" get cut in every budget crunch and finally being gutted to total uselessness.
It should simply be expected a public transit should be paid from state in one form or another.
When I commuted from Mountain View to the financial district, it was cheaper to drive by myself than to take public transit including the lifetime cost of my car. (not to mention being immensely more pleasant)
I simply do not get the economics of public transit losing so much money.
I get that I'm not paying myself a salary to drive the vehicle and that the roads I drive on are "free" and the railroad track isn't... but still one would expect the efficiency of rail and economies of scale to make up for this.
Instead BART costs hundreds of millions of dollars per year more than received fares.
When you consider the total cost of ownership (initial car cost, maintenance, insurance, storage, etc.), the cost per km/mile is way higher than the fuel cost.
Also there are many externalized costs that are not taken into account when considering the bare cost of driving a car, just to name a few the environmental impact, the related healthcare costs (pollution kills more people per year than COVID), parking space, road infrastructure, car accidents, ... Some of these grow non linearly when reducing/eliminating public transport.
As you already mentioned: roads and gas is heavily subsidized. Politicians focus on building roads rather than public transport systems. The true costs of road infrastructure including parking, bridges, land use, public space usage, health system costs, economic losses due to wasting time while driving and more is just something no one dares to discuss. Once u start looking at all costs car traffic truly is responsible for, you'd have to immediately switch to another system such as... public transport.
I don't think public transits lend themselves to such "unit-economics" level individual centric analysis. There are many indirect second/third order benefits which I conjecture outweigh the primary benefit of transporting people from A to B. To name a few
1. They attract a section of population to the region who prefer public transit which in turn leads to more business.
2. A string of businesses spring up in/around intermediate stations. Then you have service businesses that support those; like restaurant etc.,
5. It makes car ownership that much less of a requirement for jobs in the city.
This is what I noticed in Amsterdam, Netherlands where car commute is considered almost as a last resort. Obviously there are other things that need to fall in place to make public transit work but I believe it on its own is quite beneficial.
From the view point of an individual I don't doubt that economically car commute is perhaps cheaper than mass-transit, but I don't think think that's the goal of a public transit. The benefit to the society is at an aggregate direct and indirect.
> It should simply be expected a public transit should be paid from state in one form or another.
Unfortunately, that often means it becomes a subsidy for the already wealthy. Not only are mass-transit systems more likely to be built in already wealthy areas, commercial and residential, (at least before other areas) it also increases land value.
This leads to the true problem of non-state supplied transit, if a transit system truly has to bear its own cost then people - even wealthy ones - are far less likely to use it and will move to cheaper forms of transport like car, or you end up with a transit system for those who can afford it.
Then you'll have the circular argument begin again about the need for affordable mass-transit, and so the only way to get it built is to get the state to pay for it and we end up with a better system overall but also an inequity in the system. You could say it was verging on corruption.
This is why I would advocate a land value tax, as it attacks both parts of the problem, not just one favoured by statists.
As someone of a more libertarian bent (and an admirer of Georgism), I do rankle somewhat at the implication exposed via the non-payment of tax, that the state in truth owns your land because they can kick you off, but everything has a trade off.
>Unfortunately, that often means it becomes a subsidy for the already wealthy. Not only are mass-transit systems more likely to be built in already wealthy areas, commercial and residential, (at least before other areas) it also increases land value.
Not necessary. I know of several examples where wealthy areas actively blocked mass transit because they only see it as a way to introduce poor people into their neighborhood.
>This leads to the true problem of non-state supplied transit, if a transit system truly has to bear its own cost then people - even wealthy ones - are far less likely to use it and will move to cheaper forms of transport like car, or you end up with a transit system for those who can afford it
If every transit system has to pay for all externalities then cars will not end up being cheaper than mass transit. Subsidy of mass transit is a way to correct for that.
>As someone of a more libertarian bent (and an admirer of Georgism), I do rankle somewhat at the implication exposed via the non-payment of tax, that the state in truth owns your land because they can kick you off
I really don't see the link between the state being able kick you off and paying taxes, nor do I see the relevance. The state being able to kick you of your land is a necessity for an effective government. How else would they be able to get anything build?
> Not necessary. I know of several examples where wealthy areas actively blocked mass transit because they only see it as a way to introduce poor people into their neighborhood.
I don't disagree, which is why I wrote "often" and not "always".
> If every transit system has to pay for all externalities then cars will not end up being cheaper than mass transit.
It would be interesting to know where all these externalities are currently paid for, who pays them, and how they got them to be paid, because as far as I know there is nowhere this is case and that means we're comparing an ideal - a possibly unobtainable ideal - against other things like land value tax that have been implemented.
> Subsidy of mass transit is a way to correct for that.
Or - and it would seem more consistent with the argument you just gave - not subsidising the other transit systems such as cars.
> I really don't see the link between the state being able kick you off and paying taxes
Because under other systems of tax the government does not have nearly as direct a say in whether you get to stay on your land. LVT makes them a kind of landlord.
> How else would they be able to get anything build?
They could purchase the land off you like anyone else, and you could refuse them as you might to anyone else. Why are you making government a special case when buying land?
In the US, one common type of externality that cars impose on society is mandatory parking space. Restaurants, shops, apartment buildings, etc. are often required to provide parking space. If you're in the US, just look around and notice how much area within cities is devoted to parking. What's the value of all that real estate?
> Or - and it would seem more consistent with the argument you just gave - not subsidising the other transit systems such as cars.
That is also possible, but probably impossible to get through in any country. Subsidy of other transit systems is a lot easier.
> They could purchase the land off you like anyone else, and you could refuse them as you might to anyone else. Why are you making government a special case when buying land?
Because the government is not just a person but represents everyone. You could never build a railway, airport, subway, etc. if all it takes is one person refusing to budge.
> Because the government is not just a person but represents everyone.
Forgive me for giving a slight chuckle that, as a cynic and (somewhat) libertarian, and simply as someone who's been around a while.
More seriously, government has been shown repeatedly not to represent everyone, and certainly not everyone equally. Is evidence required for a statement like that? No, we don't need it because you have already provided it:
> That is also possible, but probably impossible to get through in any country. Subsidy of other transit systems is a lot easier.
It's a lot easier because of the nature of government. I assume you're in tech - is the better system the one where you do less or the one where allocate resources because one system got too many so you add more to another to balance them out?
There are companies doing that, I'd call them dysfunctional. It's also a sign they're wasteful and have too much money. Again, I'm not going to be convinced of the "government is good" argument if that's the pill I need to swallow.
> You could never build a railway, airport, subway, etc. if all it takes is one person refusing to budge.
This is not true. Even if we take NIMBYism as a perjorative, there's plenty of it about and yet things still get built. There are even NIMBYs in China[0][1]. Are you really going to claim that things don't get built quickly there? When you talk about getting things done via government and steamrollering over the property rights of people, I tend to think of China's government but I could take where I'm from as an example. In the UK, the government wants to build a new high speed rail network[2] - no one, aside from them and the people who will make money from it, seems to want it. Still they press ahead, destroying ancient woodland[3], graves[4], and people[5] as they go.
> All is being cast aside to make way for HS2’s new railway terminal at Euston to be designed by Fitzrovia firm Arup who along with other mega corporations will do very nicely from the multi-million pound contracts.
But hey, who cares about property rights and the environment, right? Who cares that this mass-transit system is being used to prop up property prices in London (along with other subsidies[6]) and will displace lower paid workers even further from their place of work?
I have an alternative idea:
- no housing benefit
- no high speed rail
because then low paid workers can't afford London. Bad for them right? No, bad for them and the businesses that require them. They'll either have to pay more - which is good for the workers - or move to cheaper areas, thus creating better paid jobs or jobs where they're needed more - again, good for the workers.
And, since government is "for everyone", all of us could enjoy a tax cut, more income equality, and better land use (i.e. lower density housing, less crime, easier commute, closer to countryside…)
>Forgive me for giving a slight chuckle that, as a cynic and (somewhat) libertarian, and simply as someone who's been around a while.
True, it's far for perfect. But what you're suggesting is simply delusional.
>It's a lot easier because of the nature of government. I assume you're in tech - is the better system the one where you do less or the one where allocate resources because one system got too many so you add more to another to balance them out?
It's not a technical issue. There's just no way that's going through parliament and Subsidy of mass transit is happening right now.
>This is not true. Even if we take NIMBYism as a perjorative, there's plenty of it about and yet things still get built. There are even NIMBYs in China[0][1]. Are you really going to claim that things don't get built quickly there?
I don't see how that proves your point, China is basically the opposite of what you want. If someone doesn't want to sell the government simply sends thugs/the police to deal with them.
>When you talk about getting things done via government and steamrollering over the property rights of people, I tend to think of China's government but I could take where I'm from as an example.
The difference is that China is not a democracy and does not have separation of powers. Yes, our democracies are far from perfect but it's the best thing we have to protect the poor from the rich. Doing away with it is just going to give the rich even more power over the poor.
After calling me "delusional" I'll not feel as bad pointing out that if you can't understand why I've included in my argument something that is "basically the opposite of what you want" then you haven't understood my argument at all.
Perhaps try reading it again and, instead of taking issue with it prematurely, try to understand it first. That's probably a good general guideline for you.
It seems to me that it should be possible to operate a public transit system profitably if you assume a steady state, meaning no need to expand. But when cities grow, public transit systems must continually expand to continue to service the population which requires massive amounts of up-front capital, which each takes decades to pay back through rider fees.
"The company recorded a net profit of 61 billion yen ($560 million) for the year ended March, up 0.6% from the previous year thanks to external factors such as the increase in foreign visitors to the Japanese capital. It posted revenues of 435 billion yen."
I don't think there's something fundamentally different about Tokyo compared to other dense metropoles like NYC or London. Low density cities like LA might be a different story.
> I don't think there's something fundamentally different about Tokyo compared to other dense metropoles like NYC or London.
As others have pointed out, there is. It's about owning the land where you set up your stations. You don't make money on the tickets themselves, you make money by charging rent to companies in highly convenient locations.
Some European cities do this on a smaller scale (like a shop or two right at the station), but nowhere near as much as they do in SE Asia.
I guess my point is, given that we know that this strategy works, why aren't more Western cities' transport companies/departments copying that model? Why not trying to buy up or lease property in strategic locations and converting them into malls integrated with a metro/train station? In Tokyo you often find nearby malls connected to the station by underground walkways - I'm sure there's also a business model to be had where a percentage of revenue goes to the transport provider if they connect stations in that way.
I haven't been to Tokyo yet, but in Munich you don't just have a shop or two, some of the more central stations (Stachus, Marienplatz, Hauptbahnhof, Sendlinger Tor) have small shopping centers in the mezzanine level. While renovating these during the last years, they have tried to optimize (i.e. increase) the surface usable for shops.
But it's still pretty unfair if you think about it: having a subway system is a major plus for a city, so landlords get to collect more rent (generally, and even more if the building has a subway station nearby). So it's only natural to ask them to pay slightly higher taxes to help finance public transportation. But subway systems still have to justify why they are cross-financed using tax money...
Same in Berlin as well, Hauptbahnhof, Ostkreuz, Ostbahnhof (e.g. important stations with lots of passengers) have shops inside them, but the others usually just have a place to get coffee or bagels only.
Maybe it's time to seriously consider the East Asian model where transit companies also operate as property developers. This pretty much ensures that cities are designed with mass transit at its core and mass transit construction is part subsidized by the market.
That doesn't completely remove the need for public funding, just changes the dynamics so that it is more balanced. It also results in cities that organically grow with mass transit, making it an integral part of the infrastructure rather than an afterthought.
The Metropolitan Line of the London Underground was partly funded on that model. They bought farmland, built out a commuter railway to it, then either built housing or sold land at a profit in order to get capital receipts to part-pay for the railway and customers to ride it in perpetuity.
Wasn't this model a reason for the decline of the US public transit system? I remember reading somewhere that in cities like LA, transit companies build little frequented lines to properties they themselves developed, just to drive house prices up. After the properties were sold, the companies lost interest in maintaining the lines, and the system quickly deteriorated.
> Any implication that public transition should be profitable is pernicious.
Really, or is it a failure of the western cities to run profitable, efficient and ,eh, clean transport networks. Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore are running private, profitable and efficient metros for a much cheaper fare than what other cities can do.
The reality is that these massive infrastructure projects have turned into huge embezzlement schemes of public funds from different players (politicians, consultants, unions, etc...); and they are holding the public hostage: Otherwise, are you going to stop/disrupt public transportation?
I don't think the success of private/public is a universal thing and probably depend on how low corruption the government is. A metro system has to be bootstrapped by the government at the end of the day, to be able to appropriate of some private lands you are going through.
“are constructed and the assets owned by the Land Transport Authority (LTA), who allocates operating concessions to two for-profit private corporations, namely SMRT and SBS Transit.”
Of course they need to be profitable. A working public mass transport system is the sine qua non of dense cities. Dense cities reap many economic benefits so naturally the cost of providing mass transportation must be weighed as well. It's outright unsustainable to ignore the cost sinks of cities as much as it is to ignore the cost sinks of suburbs or rural areas.
Of course they should NOT be profitable, because remote routes are not profitable to operate, yet it is in everybody's interest to prevent overcrowding and excessive density. Give me one example of a successful metro that was built on "profitability". It may become profitable in the end, but only because the initial intention was public service, not profit.
This kind of capitalistic short-term thinking over long-term public interest is precisely what is wrong with America today.
"public service", my ass. The purpose of mass transit is to gather the cheap workforce from around the city so a banker can have their Starbucks coffee for about the same price as everywhere else, offices get cleaned properly, and millions of employees can waste hours every day rushing into their cubicles that have to be in some "representative" location so the CEO can jerk off with their golf buddies. The goal of ever denser cities is first and foremost to move the profits from the economic benefits of densification to rent seekers, in particular owners of ever scarcer real estate. Mass transit is a tool to make that possible.
Mass transit is almost certainly profitable, if priced correctly. It enables massive value concentration. One could easily introduce a property tax on real estate to fund it. But right now the profiteers managed to argue that it is a "public good". As if square meter prices measured in the tenths of thousands of dollars are in any form normal.
Just to make this crystal clear: No one would build a mass transit system to move around a few tourists or get the inhabitants from their apartments to the latest fancy restaurant. Mass transit exists to fill the city with a workforce it cannot or doesn't want to house properly.
Here in Germany you will sometimes read about discussions on making public transport free, making it a completely public utility. I’d be more than happy to pay taxes for that.
'Totally free' is usually a bad idea because the asymmetries inherent in the system are multiplied.
The OP argument 'everyone uses it' is also not super rational argument either on it's face - we all 'use food' and 'water' but we pay for those - the former in market terms, and the later is socialized on some level but still paid for by individuals on a usage basis.
1) You'd be happy to have people in villages and in the countryside pay for your transportation, who wouldn't? It's not fair or ideal, to have some people's tax money pushed heavily into systems that don't benefit them.
2) When things are 'free' we tend to use them in a way that does not reflect their true cost. Imagine if toilet paper were 'free' for everyone. We'd probably use a lot more of it, unnecessarily so.
The issue with metros is the intense capital costs and de facto monopoly status.
If there were 20 metros too choose from we wouldn't even think of socializing them, you'd just have to 'pay for it' literally like everything else.
The 'Strategic Advantage' in the metro is that it's actually a very efficient way to move people, but those efficiencies may not be realizable without subsidy.
So instead of 'free' - a reasonable solution might be to subsidize expansion while requiring regular Ops to be paid for out of revenue. Some investment in urban facilities is warranted vis-a-vis the countryside due to the big upside i.e. a large bit of social/industrial gain can be had by government investment that could not be had otherwise.
> 1) You'd be happy to have people in villages and in the countryside pay for your transportation, who wouldn't? It's not fair or ideal, to have some people's tax money pushed heavily into systems that don't benefit them.
I know this is not the case in the US but here, it is common to have public transport on the country side as well to some degree. Most villages have bus transport. Yes, there is a lot more in the city but it grows with density.
> 2) When things are 'free' we tend to use them in a way that does not reflect their true cost. Imagine if toilet paper were 'free' for everyone. We'd probably use a lot more of it, unnecessarily so.
I do not think there is such thing as an excessive/unnecessary use of public transport when the alternative is to use a car which pollutes the planet. I cannot imagine using the tram in cases where it would be unnecessary, but maybe thats just me.
If it is in the interest of the people to get rid of cars, offering public transport at no cost is not so far fetched, considering the amounts of money we will have to spend to combat carbon in the air and are spending on road systems.
> it is common to have public transport on the country side as well to some degree. Most villages have bus transport.
I don‘t think it‘s fair to compare running a bus line on pre-existing roads to maintaining and extending a subway network. People living in big cities already have the advantage of better jobs and much better pay, so I think it‘s fair to expect them to pay for their own transport. Those who choose to live or better said not leave the countryside do it by taking a risk of a harder life yet with maybe more satisfaction in some ways. In this context, I think it’s not justifiable to burden them with supporting the city people when it‘s clear they will get zero benefit out of it.
There are subsidies that flow in both directions. People in the countryside pay taxes that go to public transit in cities. People in cities pay taxes that go to large agricultural subsidies. Even in terms of infrastructure, I would bet that rural communities get a net subsidy. There are often government subsidies to ensure coverage in rural areas: postal service, telephone, internet, power, etc.
> I don‘t think it‘s fair to compare running a bus line on pre-existing roads to maintaining and extending a subway network.
Yet, it is. Both have the same purpose on different scales and environments.
> People living in big cities already have the advantage of better jobs and much better pay
I would argue that this is the case only for some professions, not all. Outside of white-collar work there is little difference in wages, however that is exactly the demographic which would benefit most from this. May it be the bus or the subway, getting around should be possible to all.
> Outside of white-collar work there is little difference in wages
As someone who lives in Germany I can say this is extremely innacurate. ALL jobs pay better in large german cities, to account for the higher cost of living.
> May it be the bus or the subway, getting around should be possible to all.
You are spinning this in the wrong direction. I never argued that some people shouldn’t have access to public transport, just that people who stay away from large cities shouldn’t be forced to pay for the comfort and privileges of those living there. I’m sure small rural communities or even medium sized towns and cities can afford to pay for their own bus lines. Living in a large city has its disadvantages, and one of them is cashing out for the train ticket, out of those fat paychecks.
> ALL jobs pay better in large german cities, to account for the higher cost of living.
Born and raised here. Pretty sure people being paid minimum wage is a thing both in the city as well as the country side. I would even argue the amount of low-payed jobs is higher in big cities with lots of "disposable" people to do them.
> just that people who stay away from large cities shouldn’t be forced to pay for the comfort and privileges of those living there.
I can say the same for paying taxes for roadwork. I don't need them, still I am paying for them. Especially in Germany, where there is no road tolls and no private roads. The cost of environmental damage also accounts for that.
> Living in a large city has its disadvantages, and one of them is cashing out for the train ticket, out of those fat paychecks.
If you run the numbers you will realise that owning a care here, including repairs, insurance and gas is quite a bit more expensive than getting a subscription for public transport.
--> demand for transportation is absolutely elastic.
There's no doubt there - it's easily demonstrable.
If right now you increased the cost of a tram ticket so that the Subway could break even and make a 5% profit, then usage would drop off quite noticeably.
The difference between a 'market rate' and 'free' is very substantial, and it's a first-order misapplication of resources.
Making stuff 'free' is almost always a bad idea.
I actually do believe that we should invest more in subways, because the net advantages are quite a lot (at least in North America we don't invest enough), but my point is we have to be careful about the logic of social spending.
Supply and Demand, basic Economics don't just magically go away.
Well, you are wrong about what you "know." The US government subsidizes airports, airfare, and other forms of transit to a significant number of rural destinations in the country. If they did not do so, domestic airlines would not fly to these areas because it would not be profitable.
Why do you think this is not the case in the US? Do you just assume the worst about our country? Why?
I think these are all really bad analogies. I doubt people will make "unnecessary" trips using public transportation just because it's free. Most people that already use it have some kind of subscription where they pay a fixed amount every week/month/year and don't try to spend as much time as possible using it. I can only see this happening if you make long distance transportation free and suddenly people go on day trips every weekend.
At least in Germany public transport reaches into very deep countryside and it is used widely everywhere. This is certainly not about just supporting urban transportation.
Looking at the spreadsheet subsidies make up fully half of the revenues. I suspect those are adjusted as needed to zero out the metro budget, which explains why, after subsidies, the bottom line is “barely profitable.”
Regarding metros and profitability: someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that the Tokyo subway system (which is operated by a byzantine-like variety of companies) does turn a profit, specifically because it owns the real estate around the stations.
This seems like a better route than a blank check "it shouldn't need to be profitable", which, when comparing American public transit to Tokyo's, doesn't seem to actually make service any better.
yeah but it's hard to determine "real" profitability when all the initial investment was made by the state and hte company itself is partly state-owned. i think the profitability or not is a bit of a red herring
When I lived in Tartu, Estonia, there were two free, privately operated bus routes circling through town, they had several convenient stops, one of them happening to be the large shopping center that operates the line.
We often used these busses, just to get around town, and, well, sometimes to get to the shopping center.
Seen isolated, these bus lines were losing money, they made literally no profit, all expense, no ticket sales.
Them being free, however, was not charity, their presence generated so much additional revenue in the respective shopping-centers that it made sense to run them.
As far as I understand, they were funded through the rent paid by the shops in the centers. So "transporting customers to your shop location" was included in the rent, neat.
Now, in more taxed countries, like Denmark, a goverment-run model would work as well in more populated areas, as transportation becomes free, people become more mobile, and will travel more often to buy goods, and more sales-taxes result.
This argument has to work against the fact that the 'stuff' in the shops is x% more expensive because they are paying for their bus on the backend.
Do you think a transportation system that is perversely incented and controlled by 'the shopping mall' to do specific things, subject to all sorts of weird policies ... is going to be more efficient than simply reducing the price of goods and allowing travellers to pay themselves - and decide for themselves where they want to travel and for what purpose?
Getting the capital costs sorted out for these things is hard, the shopping mall would have been one of the few places to foot the initial bill - that's probably why it happened the way it happened.
But it probably would have been more efficient for some state actor to step in and provide the means for it to work more broadly.
Yes, of course the money is coming from the goods sold, and so is the money for all other expenses the shops have.
This is highly offset by the lower property price of being able to place the shop outside the city center (and the additional convenience of being located right next to the highest-traffic road).
So goods were still cheaper in the shopping center than in the stores located in the city-center.
I didn't say this would be the most efficient solution, I just wanted to point out that asking if a transportation infrastructure is profitable, and only looking at it in isolation is silly, because the value it adds to the areas around its stops can highly outweigh the cost of operating it.
This is what Hong Kong does. It can never be a fully private system though bevause the government must apply zoning and permits to potential new lines.
I have no problem with _public_ transportation not being private.
There is too much private anyway when it comes to land-use. Obviously you have to ensure to avoid the common pit-falls of government run (or intervened) companies, but we have decades of knowledge about this now and should be able to design better systems.
62 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 138 ms ] threadIn the case of the SF Muni, the main reason to look at privatization isn't directly cost, but to replace the union whose members don't even show up 33% of the time despite 6-figure salaries even for ticket booth operators.
The Caltrain was privately operated, until it was dropped by the railway and it became a publicly-operated service (it's essential for Stanford U. staff and students, and reducing 101 and 280 highway traffic, so simply can't be discontinued. But wifi is optional, so it doesn't have it.)
If you look at a system like BART or the New York subway system, the system provides value for the whole of the city and so everyone, notably employers, should pay for it.
I think Strong Towns were the ones who noted that transit system expected to "pull their weight" get cut in every budget crunch and finally being gutted to total uselessness.
It should simply be expected a public transit should be paid from state in one form or another.
When I commuted from Mountain View to the financial district, it was cheaper to drive by myself than to take public transit including the lifetime cost of my car. (not to mention being immensely more pleasant)
I simply do not get the economics of public transit losing so much money.
I get that I'm not paying myself a salary to drive the vehicle and that the roads I drive on are "free" and the railroad track isn't... but still one would expect the efficiency of rail and economies of scale to make up for this.
Instead BART costs hundreds of millions of dollars per year more than received fares.
I just don't understand.
(edited to add TCO considerations)
1. They attract a section of population to the region who prefer public transit which in turn leads to more business.
2. A string of businesses spring up in/around intermediate stations. Then you have service businesses that support those; like restaurant etc.,
3. It creates employment for thousands.
4. Cost savings w.r.t. parking space, reduced accidents etc.,
5. It makes car ownership that much less of a requirement for jobs in the city.
This is what I noticed in Amsterdam, Netherlands where car commute is considered almost as a last resort. Obviously there are other things that need to fall in place to make public transit work but I believe it on its own is quite beneficial.
From the view point of an individual I don't doubt that economically car commute is perhaps cheaper than mass-transit, but I don't think think that's the goal of a public transit. The benefit to the society is at an aggregate direct and indirect.
Unfortunately, that often means it becomes a subsidy for the already wealthy. Not only are mass-transit systems more likely to be built in already wealthy areas, commercial and residential, (at least before other areas) it also increases land value.
This leads to the true problem of non-state supplied transit, if a transit system truly has to bear its own cost then people - even wealthy ones - are far less likely to use it and will move to cheaper forms of transport like car, or you end up with a transit system for those who can afford it.
Then you'll have the circular argument begin again about the need for affordable mass-transit, and so the only way to get it built is to get the state to pay for it and we end up with a better system overall but also an inequity in the system. You could say it was verging on corruption.
This is why I would advocate a land value tax, as it attacks both parts of the problem, not just one favoured by statists.
As someone of a more libertarian bent (and an admirer of Georgism), I do rankle somewhat at the implication exposed via the non-payment of tax, that the state in truth owns your land because they can kick you off, but everything has a trade off.
Edit: typo
Not necessary. I know of several examples where wealthy areas actively blocked mass transit because they only see it as a way to introduce poor people into their neighborhood.
>This leads to the true problem of non-state supplied transit, if a transit system truly has to bear its own cost then people - even wealthy ones - are far less likely to use it and will move to cheaper forms of transport like car, or you end up with a transit system for those who can afford it
If every transit system has to pay for all externalities then cars will not end up being cheaper than mass transit. Subsidy of mass transit is a way to correct for that.
>As someone of a more libertarian bent (and an admirer of Georgism), I do rankle somewhat at the implication exposed via the non-payment of tax, that the state in truth owns your land because they can kick you off
I really don't see the link between the state being able kick you off and paying taxes, nor do I see the relevance. The state being able to kick you of your land is a necessity for an effective government. How else would they be able to get anything build?
I don't disagree, which is why I wrote "often" and not "always".
> If every transit system has to pay for all externalities then cars will not end up being cheaper than mass transit.
It would be interesting to know where all these externalities are currently paid for, who pays them, and how they got them to be paid, because as far as I know there is nowhere this is case and that means we're comparing an ideal - a possibly unobtainable ideal - against other things like land value tax that have been implemented.
> Subsidy of mass transit is a way to correct for that.
Or - and it would seem more consistent with the argument you just gave - not subsidising the other transit systems such as cars.
> I really don't see the link between the state being able kick you off and paying taxes
Because under other systems of tax the government does not have nearly as direct a say in whether you get to stay on your land. LVT makes them a kind of landlord.
> How else would they be able to get anything build?
They could purchase the land off you like anyone else, and you could refuse them as you might to anyone else. Why are you making government a special case when buying land?
That is also possible, but probably impossible to get through in any country. Subsidy of other transit systems is a lot easier.
> They could purchase the land off you like anyone else, and you could refuse them as you might to anyone else. Why are you making government a special case when buying land?
Because the government is not just a person but represents everyone. You could never build a railway, airport, subway, etc. if all it takes is one person refusing to budge.
Forgive me for giving a slight chuckle that, as a cynic and (somewhat) libertarian, and simply as someone who's been around a while.
More seriously, government has been shown repeatedly not to represent everyone, and certainly not everyone equally. Is evidence required for a statement like that? No, we don't need it because you have already provided it:
> That is also possible, but probably impossible to get through in any country. Subsidy of other transit systems is a lot easier.
It's a lot easier because of the nature of government. I assume you're in tech - is the better system the one where you do less or the one where allocate resources because one system got too many so you add more to another to balance them out?
There are companies doing that, I'd call them dysfunctional. It's also a sign they're wasteful and have too much money. Again, I'm not going to be convinced of the "government is good" argument if that's the pill I need to swallow.
> You could never build a railway, airport, subway, etc. if all it takes is one person refusing to budge.
This is not true. Even if we take NIMBYism as a perjorative, there's plenty of it about and yet things still get built. There are even NIMBYs in China[0][1]. Are you really going to claim that things don't get built quickly there? When you talk about getting things done via government and steamrollering over the property rights of people, I tend to think of China's government but I could take where I'm from as an example. In the UK, the government wants to build a new high speed rail network[2] - no one, aside from them and the people who will make money from it, seems to want it. Still they press ahead, destroying ancient woodland[3], graves[4], and people[5] as they go.
> All is being cast aside to make way for HS2’s new railway terminal at Euston to be designed by Fitzrovia firm Arup who along with other mega corporations will do very nicely from the multi-million pound contracts.
But hey, who cares about property rights and the environment, right? Who cares that this mass-transit system is being used to prop up property prices in London (along with other subsidies[6]) and will displace lower paid workers even further from their place of work?
I have an alternative idea:
- no housing benefit - no high speed rail
because then low paid workers can't afford London. Bad for them right? No, bad for them and the businesses that require them. They'll either have to pay more - which is good for the workers - or move to cheaper areas, thus creating better paid jobs or jobs where they're needed more - again, good for the workers.
And, since government is "for everyone", all of us could enjoy a tax cut, more income equality, and better land use (i.e. lower density housing, less crime, easier commute, closer to countryside…)
[0] https://edition.cnn.com/2015/05/19/asia/gallery/china-nail-h... "China's 'nail houses': The homeowners who refused to budge"
[1] https://chinadialogue.net/en/pollution/6051-china-s-nimby-pr... "China’s ‘nimby’ protests sign of unequal society"
[2] https://apnews.com/5712b97df48434446dbf0fc3048a3f5c "UK’s Johnson backs high speed railway despite opposition"
[3] CorrectHorseBat ↗ >Forgive me for giving a slight chuckle that, as a cynic and (somewhat) libertarian, and simply as someone who's been around a while. brigandish ↗ > I don't see how that proves your point
True, it's far for perfect. But what you're suggesting is simply delusional.
>It's a lot easier because of the nature of government. I assume you're in tech - is the better system the one where you do less or the one where allocate resources because one system got too many so you add more to another to balance them out?
It's not a technical issue. There's just no way that's going through parliament and Subsidy of mass transit is happening right now.
>This is not true. Even if we take NIMBYism as a perjorative, there's plenty of it about and yet things still get built. There are even NIMBYs in China[0][1]. Are you really going to claim that things don't get built quickly there?
I don't see how that proves your point, China is basically the opposite of what you want. If someone doesn't want to sell the government simply sends thugs/the police to deal with them.
>When you talk about getting things done via government and steamrollering over the property rights of people, I tend to think of China's government but I could take where I'm from as an example.
The difference is that China is not a democracy and does not have separation of powers. Yes, our democracies are far from perfect but it's the best thing we have to protect the poor from the rich. Doing away with it is just going to give the rich even more power over the poor.
After calling me "delusional" I'll not feel as bad pointing out that if you can't understand why I've included in my argument something that is "basically the opposite of what you want" then you haven't understood my argument at all.
Perhaps try reading it again and, instead of taking issue with it prematurely, try to understand it first. That's probably a good general guideline for you.
I'm out.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Transportation/Tokyo-Metro-...
"The company recorded a net profit of 61 billion yen ($560 million) for the year ended March, up 0.6% from the previous year thanks to external factors such as the increase in foreign visitors to the Japanese capital. It posted revenues of 435 billion yen."
I don't think there's something fundamentally different about Tokyo compared to other dense metropoles like NYC or London. Low density cities like LA might be a different story.
As others have pointed out, there is. It's about owning the land where you set up your stations. You don't make money on the tickets themselves, you make money by charging rent to companies in highly convenient locations.
Some European cities do this on a smaller scale (like a shop or two right at the station), but nowhere near as much as they do in SE Asia.
But it's still pretty unfair if you think about it: having a subway system is a major plus for a city, so landlords get to collect more rent (generally, and even more if the building has a subway station nearby). So it's only natural to ask them to pay slightly higher taxes to help finance public transportation. But subway systems still have to justify why they are cross-financed using tax money...
But people also want public transport in rural regions and there it is just far way from profitable. But it‘s still necessary to provide IMHO.
That doesn't completely remove the need for public funding, just changes the dynamics so that it is more balanced. It also results in cities that organically grow with mass transit, making it an integral part of the infrastructure rather than an afterthought.
Really, or is it a failure of the western cities to run profitable, efficient and ,eh, clean transport networks. Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore are running private, profitable and efficient metros for a much cheaper fare than what other cities can do.
The reality is that these massive infrastructure projects have turned into huge embezzlement schemes of public funds from different players (politicians, consultants, unions, etc...); and they are holding the public hostage: Otherwise, are you going to stop/disrupt public transportation?
In most other countries that land was sold off and somebody else (e.g. private equity) profits.
Singapore's MRT subway lines are constructed and the assets owned by the Land Transport Authority (LTA), a government entity.
Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation (Toei Subway) is owned by the government of Tokyo.
MTR Corporation Limited which runs Hong Kong's Mass Transit Railway (MTR) is a majority state-owned Hong Kong company (75.09%).
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_Rapid_Transit_(Singapor...
Singapore loves competition. The public hospitals are, well, public, but were restructured to compete with each other more like private businesses.
This kind of capitalistic short-term thinking over long-term public interest is precisely what is wrong with America today.
Mass transit is almost certainly profitable, if priced correctly. It enables massive value concentration. One could easily introduce a property tax on real estate to fund it. But right now the profiteers managed to argue that it is a "public good". As if square meter prices measured in the tenths of thousands of dollars are in any form normal.
Just to make this crystal clear: No one would build a mass transit system to move around a few tourists or get the inhabitants from their apartments to the latest fancy restaurant. Mass transit exists to fill the city with a workforce it cannot or doesn't want to house properly.
The OP argument 'everyone uses it' is also not super rational argument either on it's face - we all 'use food' and 'water' but we pay for those - the former in market terms, and the later is socialized on some level but still paid for by individuals on a usage basis.
1) You'd be happy to have people in villages and in the countryside pay for your transportation, who wouldn't? It's not fair or ideal, to have some people's tax money pushed heavily into systems that don't benefit them.
2) When things are 'free' we tend to use them in a way that does not reflect their true cost. Imagine if toilet paper were 'free' for everyone. We'd probably use a lot more of it, unnecessarily so.
The issue with metros is the intense capital costs and de facto monopoly status.
If there were 20 metros too choose from we wouldn't even think of socializing them, you'd just have to 'pay for it' literally like everything else.
The 'Strategic Advantage' in the metro is that it's actually a very efficient way to move people, but those efficiencies may not be realizable without subsidy.
So instead of 'free' - a reasonable solution might be to subsidize expansion while requiring regular Ops to be paid for out of revenue. Some investment in urban facilities is warranted vis-a-vis the countryside due to the big upside i.e. a large bit of social/industrial gain can be had by government investment that could not be had otherwise.
I know this is not the case in the US but here, it is common to have public transport on the country side as well to some degree. Most villages have bus transport. Yes, there is a lot more in the city but it grows with density.
> 2) When things are 'free' we tend to use them in a way that does not reflect their true cost. Imagine if toilet paper were 'free' for everyone. We'd probably use a lot more of it, unnecessarily so.
I do not think there is such thing as an excessive/unnecessary use of public transport when the alternative is to use a car which pollutes the planet. I cannot imagine using the tram in cases where it would be unnecessary, but maybe thats just me.
If it is in the interest of the people to get rid of cars, offering public transport at no cost is not so far fetched, considering the amounts of money we will have to spend to combat carbon in the air and are spending on road systems.
I don‘t think it‘s fair to compare running a bus line on pre-existing roads to maintaining and extending a subway network. People living in big cities already have the advantage of better jobs and much better pay, so I think it‘s fair to expect them to pay for their own transport. Those who choose to live or better said not leave the countryside do it by taking a risk of a harder life yet with maybe more satisfaction in some ways. In this context, I think it’s not justifiable to burden them with supporting the city people when it‘s clear they will get zero benefit out of it.
Yet, it is. Both have the same purpose on different scales and environments.
> People living in big cities already have the advantage of better jobs and much better pay
I would argue that this is the case only for some professions, not all. Outside of white-collar work there is little difference in wages, however that is exactly the demographic which would benefit most from this. May it be the bus or the subway, getting around should be possible to all.
As someone who lives in Germany I can say this is extremely innacurate. ALL jobs pay better in large german cities, to account for the higher cost of living.
> May it be the bus or the subway, getting around should be possible to all.
You are spinning this in the wrong direction. I never argued that some people shouldn’t have access to public transport, just that people who stay away from large cities shouldn’t be forced to pay for the comfort and privileges of those living there. I’m sure small rural communities or even medium sized towns and cities can afford to pay for their own bus lines. Living in a large city has its disadvantages, and one of them is cashing out for the train ticket, out of those fat paychecks.
Born and raised here. Pretty sure people being paid minimum wage is a thing both in the city as well as the country side. I would even argue the amount of low-payed jobs is higher in big cities with lots of "disposable" people to do them.
> just that people who stay away from large cities shouldn’t be forced to pay for the comfort and privileges of those living there.
I can say the same for paying taxes for roadwork. I don't need them, still I am paying for them. Especially in Germany, where there is no road tolls and no private roads. The cost of environmental damage also accounts for that.
> Living in a large city has its disadvantages, and one of them is cashing out for the train ticket, out of those fat paychecks.
If you run the numbers you will realise that owning a care here, including repairs, insurance and gas is quite a bit more expensive than getting a subscription for public transport.
--> demand for transportation is absolutely elastic.
There's no doubt there - it's easily demonstrable.
If right now you increased the cost of a tram ticket so that the Subway could break even and make a 5% profit, then usage would drop off quite noticeably.
The difference between a 'market rate' and 'free' is very substantial, and it's a first-order misapplication of resources.
Making stuff 'free' is almost always a bad idea.
I actually do believe that we should invest more in subways, because the net advantages are quite a lot (at least in North America we don't invest enough), but my point is we have to be careful about the logic of social spending.
Supply and Demand, basic Economics don't just magically go away.
Well, you are wrong about what you "know." The US government subsidizes airports, airfare, and other forms of transit to a significant number of rural destinations in the country. If they did not do so, domestic airlines would not fly to these areas because it would not be profitable.
Why do you think this is not the case in the US? Do you just assume the worst about our country? Why?
This seems like a better route than a blank check "it shouldn't need to be profitable", which, when comparing American public transit to Tokyo's, doesn't seem to actually make service any better.
We often used these busses, just to get around town, and, well, sometimes to get to the shopping center.
Seen isolated, these bus lines were losing money, they made literally no profit, all expense, no ticket sales.
Them being free, however, was not charity, their presence generated so much additional revenue in the respective shopping-centers that it made sense to run them. As far as I understand, they were funded through the rent paid by the shops in the centers. So "transporting customers to your shop location" was included in the rent, neat.
Now, in more taxed countries, like Denmark, a goverment-run model would work as well in more populated areas, as transportation becomes free, people become more mobile, and will travel more often to buy goods, and more sales-taxes result.
Do you think a transportation system that is perversely incented and controlled by 'the shopping mall' to do specific things, subject to all sorts of weird policies ... is going to be more efficient than simply reducing the price of goods and allowing travellers to pay themselves - and decide for themselves where they want to travel and for what purpose?
Getting the capital costs sorted out for these things is hard, the shopping mall would have been one of the few places to foot the initial bill - that's probably why it happened the way it happened.
But it probably would have been more efficient for some state actor to step in and provide the means for it to work more broadly.
So goods were still cheaper in the shopping center than in the stores located in the city-center.
I didn't say this would be the most efficient solution, I just wanted to point out that asking if a transportation infrastructure is profitable, and only looking at it in isolation is silly, because the value it adds to the areas around its stops can highly outweigh the cost of operating it.
* build public transportation to reach land
* sell land for higher price due to good access with public transportation
* use profit to pay back loan for building public transportation
There is some city in Asia (I know^^) that uses this playbook very successfully, sadly I can't find the article where I learned about it anymore.
There is too much private anyway when it comes to land-use. Obviously you have to ensure to avoid the common pit-falls of government run (or intervened) companies, but we have decades of knowledge about this now and should be able to design better systems.
For example, all new highways in Jakarta are toll roads, operated by a dedicated company.
There are no public parking lots.
https://theinsiderstories.com/indonesias-jasa-marga-to-opera...