|
No
More Road Socialism
by
Doug French
by Doug French
Whenever I
engage anyone in a discussion about getting rid of government, the
first question I’m posed with is: "what about the roads?"
"How would that work? I mean, if private enterprise owned the
roads, then the road owners would jack up the price to point where
we couldn’t leave our homes." As if that’s what private firms
do: raise prices to the point where no one can afford their products.
Private firms
must provide products that people want to buy; at a price consumers
are willing to pay. Otherwise, these firms go out of business. Government,
the current owner of most roads does not go out of business, no
matter how crummy a product or service it produces.
Thus, I had
to smile when I picked up the May 8th edition of Barron’s,
with it’s cover story entitled, "Paying Up!" It seems
that state and city governments around the country are selling their
toll roads to raise cash. And it’s foreign companies that are buying
these roads.
The Chicago
Skyway toll road was just sold for $1.8 billion, while the Indian
Toll Road just went for $3.8 billion. Both sales were in excess
of 40 times trailing annual earnings, rich valuations that has greedy
politicians salivating. The Pocahontas Parkway sold for 60 times
revenue, or $611 Million. And the Pocahontas is only nine miles
long.
"Ironically,"
wrote Andrew Bary, "the largest private toll outfits are from
Western Europe hardly a bastion of free-market capitalism
while virtually all major toll roads in the U.S. are publicly
owned."
Bary points
out that in addition to existing road sales, new toll roads are
being built by private enterprise. A Spanish company, Cintra will
lead a group to build a 316-mile toll road between San Antonio and
Dallas.
Drivers will
receive better service from private toll road operators. Many government
operated toll roads do not even have electronic toll-collection
systems in place. "Private enterprise can do amazing things
with an asset that has been poorly managed by the public sector,"
according Peter Samuel, publisher of TollRoadsNews. Samuel
told Barron’s that the new owners of the Chicago Skyway have
increased traffic five percent and toll revenue 33 percent.
"Toll
authorities often are inefficient because profit maximization generally
isn’t a top priority," Bary explains. In fact state toll road
departments are ripe with patronage and corruption. "It used
to be that whoever was the governor’s top fundraiser got to run
the tollway," Illinois state senator Jeff Schoenberg told Bary.
Indiana Governor
Mitch Daniels asked his state agency once to estimate the cost to
collect a 15-cent toll. "This being government, nobody knew,
and they finally got back to me and said it was 34 cents,"
says Daniels. "My response was that we’d be better off on the
honor system."
Unfortunately,
none of the governments are getting out of the road business completely.
But, it is interesting that these toll roads are being sold to finance
other infrastructure needs. This infrastructure evidently can’t
be financed with the current tax structure; or, perhaps, the proper
incentives are not in place.
If all roads
were privately held, the firms would have a financial incentive
to make improvements and provide additional capacity when needed.
Can you imagine if I-15 was privately held? Given the demand and
financial incentives for people to come and go from Las Vegas to
Southern California, if I-15 were owned by I-15 LLC, there would
likely be four lanes coming and three leaving Vegas. Instead, government
I-15 has motorists spending hours waiting in traffic and deadly
accidents are frequent.
If MGM Mirage
can spend $7 billion on CityCenter and Boyd can spend $4 billion
on Echelon, these two could finance the purchase and widening of
I-15 in a heartbeat. The cost of that 316-mile stretch in Texas
is $6 billion. LA to Vegas is 275 miles.
If a consortium
of gaming companies purchased I-15, it’s likely they wouldn’t even
charge a toll, especially for their customers, potential customers
or vendors.
Does
the idea sound crazy? Remember, the state of California is up to
its neck in debt. If Gary Loveman, Terry Lanni and some other strip
honchos would get together and dangle a few billion in front of
Arnold, that never-gonna-happen idea for a bullet train can be mothballed
once and for all, and a few more ribbons of blacktop will start
materializing. And instead of burning up gas stranded in traffic,
those Californians will be dropping money in slot machines like
they want to be.
May
18, 2006
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He is the 2005 recipient of the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the
Center for Libertarian Studies. This is a talk given at the LRC
Conference on Gold, Freedom, and Peace.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
Doug
French Archives
|