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Economic criteria for the maintenance, modification, or creation of public urban and suburban transport services (which may not necessarily be profitable) : report of the twenty-fourth Round Table on Transport Economics, held in Paris on 22nd and 23rd Nov PDF

79 Pages·1974·3.561 MB·English
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Preview Economic criteria for the maintenance, modification, or creation of public urban and suburban transport services (which may not necessarily be profitable) : report of the twenty-fourth Round Table on Transport Economics, held in Paris on 22nd and 23rd Nov

ECONOMIC RESEARCH CENTRE ECONOMIC CRITERIA FOR THE MAINTENANCE, MODIFICATION OR CREATION OF PUBLIC URBAN AND SUBURBAN TRANSPORT SERVICES (WHICH MAY NOT NECESSARILY BE PROFITABLE) EUROPEAN CONFERENCE OF MINISTERS OF TRANSPORT PARIS 1974 ECONOMIC RESEARCH CENTRE REPORT OF THE TWENTY-FOURTH ROUND TABLE ON TRANSPORT ECONOMICS Held in Paris on 22nd and 23rd November, 1973 on the following topic: ECONOMIC CRITERIA FOR THE MAINTENANCE, MODIFICATION OR CREATION OF PUBLIC URBAN AND SUBURBAN TRANSPORT SERVICES (WHICH MAY NOT NECESSARILY BE PROFITABLE) EUROPEAN CONFERENCE OF MINISTERS OF TRANSPORT The European Conference ofMinisters ofTransport (ECMT) was instituted by a Protocol signed at Brussels on 17th October, 1953. It comprises the Ministers of Transport of the following 18 countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzer¬ land, Turkey, United Kingdom and Yugoslavia (associated countries : Australia, Canada, Japan ; observer : UnitedStates). The purposes of the ECMT are: to take whatever measures may be necessary to achieve, at general or regional level, the maximum use and most rational development of European inland transport of international importance; to co-ordinate andpromote the activities ofInternational Orga¬ nisations concerned with European inland transport (rail, road, navigable ways), taking into account the work ofsupranational authorities in this field. ECMT publications are marketed by the Sale of Publications departmentoftheOECD,2,rueAndre-Pascal, 75775PARISCEDEX16. TABLE OF CONTENTS FOREWORD (cid:9)'(cid:9) 4- LIST OF PARTICIPANTS (cid:9) 5 ECONOMIC CRITERIA FOR THE MAINTENANCE, MODIFICATION OR CREATION OF PUBLIC URBAN AND SUBURBAN TRANSPORT SERVICES (which may not necessarily be profitable) (cid:9) 8 M. E. BEESLEY SUMMARY OF THE DISCUSSION (cid:9) 38 (Round Table debate on the report) FOREWORD One of the reports considered at the International Symposium on the Theory and Practice of Transport Economics, organised by the ECMT at The Hague from 5th to 7th October 1971, was on "Economic criteria for the maintenance, modification or creation of public transport services which may not necessarily be profit¬ able: urban and suburban transport". The importance of this question and more recent research in the field led to the view that its further consideration as the subject of a Round Table discussion would be useful. No one was better qualified to draw up the introductory report for this discussion and ensure continuity of approach to the subject than the author of the paper presented at the fourth international symposium at The Hague. Thanks are due to him for this further contribution. The introductory report and the discussions at the 24th Round Table contain numerous references to the report presented at the Symposium at The Hague. It was not thought necessary to print that document again here: it is still obtainable from the ECMT Secretariat, 33, rue de Franqueville, 75775 PARIS Cedex 16. LIST OF PARTICIPANTS M. le Professeur J.P. BAUMGARTNER (Chairman) Adjoint scientifique Direction Generale des Chemins de Fer Federaux Suisses Rabbentalstr. 79 BERNE (Switzerland) Professor M.E. BEESLEY (Rapporteur) London Graduate School of Business Studies Sussex Place Regent' s Park LONDON NW1 4-SA (United Kingdom) M. L. BARTHEROTTE Directeur du Reseau Compagnie Generale Frangaise de Transports et d'Entreprises Reseau de Transports en Commun de la Communaute Urbaine de Bordeaux 25, rue Commandant Marchand 33082 BORDEAUX (France) Professor B. van BILDERBEEK Technische Hogeschool Delft Afdeling der Weg- en Waterbouwkunde Kanaalweg 2b DELFT (Netherlands) Dr. Gary BROEMSER Senior Operations Research Analyst and Policy Advisor, Policy Planning Division, Office of Policy and Plans Development Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Plans and International Affairs, Department of Transportation 400 7th St. SW. WASHINGTON D.C. 20590 (USA) Dr. H. da COSTA ANTUNES DireccSo-General de Transportes Terrestres Av. 25 de Abril, 40 LISBOA-4 (Portugal) M. P.H. DERYCKE Directeur de l'U.E.R. de Sciences Economiques Universite de Paris X - Nanterre 2, rue de Rouen 92001 NANTERRE (France) Mr. Bernard FEENEY Economist Coras Iompair Eireann 5 Kildare Street DUBLIN 2 (Ireland) M. A. FIOC Directeur des Etudes Generales S.N.C.F. 88, rue Saint-Lazare 75436 PARIS Cedex 09 (France) Professor K.M. GWILLIAM Director Institute for Transport Studies The University of Leeds LEEDS LS2 9JT (United Kingdom) M. Z. JELINOVIC Professor of Transportation Economic. Faculty University of Zagreb Vrbaniceva 37/HI 41000 ZAGREB (Yugoslavia) M. A. LOMBART Directeur d'Exploitation Societe des Transports Intercommunaux de Bruxelles Avenue de la Toison d'Or, 15, 1060 BRUXELLES (Belgium) M. M. MONTADA Regierungsdirektor Bundesverkehrsministerium Sternstrasse 100 5300 BONN (Germany) M. Y. OZDEN Expert in Planning of Transport State Planning Organisation Basbankanlik Zeskilati ANKARA (Turkey) M.^Marco PESSI President de 1'Union des Entreprises Suisses de Transports Publics (UST) Directeur de la FART 6601 LOCARNO (Switzerland) M. Alain PLAUD Ingenieur des Ponts et Chaussees Charge de Mission SAEI (MATELT) 55, rue Brillat Savarin 75013 PARIS (France) Dr. Wolfgang STERTKAMP Bundesbahndirektor Hauptv'erwaltung der Deutschen Bundesbahn Friedrich-Ebert-Anlage 43-45 6 FRANKFURT/Main 1 (Germany) Prof. Dr. Theo THIEMEYER Hochschule Linz Lehrkanzel flir Betriebswirtschaftslehre der Offentlichen Verwaltung und der Offentlichen Dienste A-4045 LINZ-AUHOF (Austria) Secretariat : Messrs A. DE WAELE et A. RATHERY ECONOMIC CRITERIA FOR THE MAINTENANCE, MODIFICATION OR CREATION OF PUBLIC URBAN AND SUBURBAN TRANSPORT SERVICES (which may not necessarily be profitable) Prof. M.E. BEESLEY London Graduate School of Business Studies 1 . INTRODUCTION I hope it will prove a useful approach if I write this paper as an extension of that I gave at the fourth ECMT Symposium in The Hague(l). I shall assume that participants will have that paper by them, and pick up the tale, as it were, where it left off. I argued there that the most justifiable potential reasons for subsidy were to be found in counteracting external social costs such as urban congestion and in. aiding, in specific ways,, the redistribution of income to "underprivileged" groups. I indicated some of the deficiencies in information now preventing a rational allocation of subsidies between different ways of creating social benefit; and I drew largely on railway experience in the United Kingdom to analyse some of the managerial and innovatory trade - offs associated with subsidy operations. I wish to review what seems the most important material published in English since I wrote the paper that bears on these issues. I take it, however, that we would not wish to exclude from discussion any of the points raised there. For ease of reference, I will call it "Economic Criteria", and page references refer to the English version. 2. ALTERNATIVE USES FOR SUBSIDY What is in many ways the most interesting United Kingdom development since has yet to be publically discussed and I can give only a general indication of its nature here. A major theme of "Economic Criteria" was the need to compare alternative pay¬ offs to subsidy. An exercise in this has recently been completed by London Transport. Greater London Council, the relevant poten¬ tial subsidy providers, wished to review the social returns from providing a total yearly subsidy of varying levels. LTE reviewed a number of alternatives, implying subsidies ranging from £15 million to £130 million a year - from some 20 per cent to 100 per cent of LTE revenue. Because of the large number of potential elements in the welfare function which might be deemed relevant, the exercise was only feasible with a simple if inaccurate proxy for social benefit. This was found in "maximising passenger miles on LTE's system". With the addition of implied budget (1) Economic Criteria for the Maintenance Modification or Creation of Public Transport Services which may not necessarily be profitable. constraints, the various levels of subsidy, this became an instruction to seek that policy which maximised passenger mileage per £ of subsidy. (More strictly perhaps one should speak of "maximising passenger mile losses" for some options which were considered. ) Now, of course it is possible to imagine very many reasons why using this relatively simple criterion should lead to para- ' doxial results in terms of net social benefit to Londoners. Thus, clearly G.L.C. should be interested in the whole transport supply, not only London Transport's; the criterion does not distinguish systematically the effects on different income groups' mobility etc. But it did, and does, have an intuitive appeal as a rough indicator of the principal social cost to be minimised, namely, road congestion, for gains in passengers to LTE are likely to come from vehicles which use roadspace more extensively than does LTE. (The criterion also represents a practical management approach within LTE. It provides an important unifying role in the search for new policies and internal initiatives. For example very different technical interests can find common ground here and it greatly helps evaluation by the leadership. This development illustrates another theme of my paper: the need to determine subsidies in part at least in the light of management require¬ ments, and I take this point up in section 5 below.) The principal options considered with reference to the criterion were: extensions to the Underground system; speeding up bus services by overground bus priority schemes (reviving, in a fashion, the old notion of tramwaj routes, but now with enhanced speeds); extending mini-bus operation; providing bus shelters; increasing wages in order to ease recruitment of labour and thus to improve existing schedule keeping by buses; various changes in fares for the system; and special concessions to groups such as old age pensioners. Broadly, the results included the following: that raising wages was clearly superior to any form of reduced or revised fare; old age pensioners' concessions generated most new traffic; and that new extensions to the under¬ grounds performed relatively badly. Thus the latter, it seems, would require an appeal to effects outside the traditional area of social cost benefit analysis as hitherto applied in London, for road decongestion is a very prominent factor in this. At the time of writing it is not known what action will follow from the subsidisers.

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