The Forum > Article Comments > Suggestions to relieve congestion > Comments
Suggestions to relieve congestion : Comments
By Patrick Wall, published 31/1/2006Patrick Wall presents new ways of tackling Sydney's traffic congestion.
- Pages:
-
- Page 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
-
- All
It is impossible to track back the two sources for the billions of dollars described glibly as "costs". The first is tied up in BTCE (1996), Transport and Greenhouse: Costs and Options for Reducing Emissions, which is a ten year-old collection of statistics with some dubious - or at least arguable - conclusions. The second simply isn't available yet, having been commissioned by a daily newspaper, so we can't assess either their sources or their calculations. Best to sell a few newspapers on the back of their sensationalism before examining their maths, right?
What all such reports and analyses fail to do is to take the obvious next step, and model some of the alternatives. If they did, enthusiastic and concerned students such as Mr Wall would have some basis for their guesswork when it comes to "solutions".
A congestion tax is simply that - a tax. The situation we find ourselves in has been exacerbated over the years by various governments' unwillingness to risk their political futures by spending our money on infrastructure. Now, of course, it is fashionable to outsource "services" - including transport - to the private sector. Maybe we should outsource the congestion tax too?
The simple fact is that no-one has any interest in making a call on what the real cost - in terms of the increased burden on businesses, particularly small ones - of decreasing CBD traffic would be. What prices would fall, which would increase? Would people be forced to move their businesses to the suburbs? What impact would that have on the transport infrastructure, and on jobs?
If Mr Wall wants to do something really useful in his University studies, he should eschew the easy points to be made from regurgitating tired old studies that say "woe, woe, all is woe", and actually do some of the hard work that is desperately needed.
What are the real alternatives? Who would win, who would lose?
Here's a hint: it ain't more taxes.