Skip to main content

Parking expert: end Monopoly's Free Parking!

Players should pay if they land on board game square, says Professor Donald Shoup
By Adam Hill November 25, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Should this be Paid Parking? (© ITS International)

The author of an influential work on the economics of parking has suggested that world-famous board game Monopoly should do away with its 'Free Parking' square.

Donald Shoup, professor of urban planning at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), says the square risks reinforcing misconceptions in players from an early age about the true cost of parking.

He wrote seminal book The High Cost of Free Parking and argues that on-street parking in effect gives away for free some of the most valuable land in a city.

He suggests that Monopoly's Free Parking space should be named Paid Parking to encourage a more realistic attitude towards something that's often taken for granted.

In an interview with ITS International he explained: "Children first learn about free parking, cities and the economy when they play Monopoly."

"When they land on another player’s property, they learn about being tenants. When they land on a property they have bought, they learn about being owner-occupiers. When another player lands on their property, they learn about being landlords."

"When they take out mortgages to build houses, they learn about investing.  When they remove houses to build hotels, they learn about urban renewal.  Finally, they learn about bankruptcy because the game ends when every player but one is bankrupt."

However, he says, one thing in the game does not add up: the probability of landing on Free Parking is the same as landing on Go To Jail.

"Most children don’t go to jail when they grow up, but almost all of them will park free when they get real cars because parking is free to the driver for 99% of all automobile trips in the US," he adds.

Shoup accepts that no-one wants to pay for parking - including him - but insists that cities should not be planned around free parking.

"Almost all parking is free to the drivers, but the cost doesn’t go away just because the driver doesn’t pay for it," he points out.

"The cost is shifted into higher prices for everything else, and even people who cannot afford a car pay indirectly for the free parking."

He says the US now has more parking space per car (at least 900 square feet) than housing space per person (about 800 square feet). 

"And all the free parking greatly increases the amount of driving, which congests traffic, pollutes the air and contributes to global warming," he concludes.

The full interview will be in the November-December edition of ITS International

Related Content

  • IBTTA summit hits right notes in Salzburg
    December 5, 2018
    In the birthplace of Mozart, Colin Sowman found that delegates at the IBTTA’s inaugural World Tolling Summit were playing a variety of interesting tunes The first World Tolling Summit took place in Salzburg, Austria this autumn. Created and organised by the International Bridge Tolling and Turnpike Association (IBTTA), the event was supported by its European counterpart Asecap and hosted by Austria’s tolling authority, Asfinag. The transfer of views, experience and practice both ways across the Atl
  • Travel times halve for tolling converts
    August 5, 2013
    The Port Mann Bridge in Vancouver is a prime example of how the latest ITS systems enable new infrastructures to be built and paid for while still providing additional user benefits. Vancouver has 2.2 million inhabitants and, like so many major cities, is divided into two by a river, the Frazer river. This combination makes Vancouver the second most congested city in North America and the most congested in Canada. Through the middle of the city runs the Trans-Canadian Highway 1 which crosses the Frazer Riv
  • Nine in 10 people want tougher sentences for drivers who kill
    July 11, 2016
    A study to mark the launch of Brake’s new Roads to Justice Campaign shows there is huge support for strengthening both the charges and sentences faced by criminal drivers. Ninety-one per cent of people questioned agreed that if someone causes a fatal crash when they get behind the wheel after drinking or taking drugs, they should be charged with manslaughter. That carries a possible life sentence. At present people can either be charged with causing death by dangerous driving or causing death by careless
  • Cable cars come of age in trans-continental expansion
    April 30, 2015
    David Crawford explores a high-level option of public transport. Sharing its origin with that of ski lifts at winter sports resorts in the European Alps, urban aerial cable transport is attracting growing interest as a low-footprint, low-energy alternative to conventional public transport that can swoop over ground-level traffic congestion.