Skip to main content

Time to decide

The old fuel tax methods can no longer produce the funding required to maintain the infrastructure without a massive increase in duty rates. In this issue we get a variety of views on two of the hottest topics in transportation; financing models and Smart Cities.
December 4, 2014 Read time: 3 mins

In this issue we get a variety of views on two of the hottest topics in transportation; financing models and Smart Cities.

With the pollution-reducing increase in fuel economy achieved by modern vehicles, the advent of hybrids and the introduction of electric cars, the old fuel tax methods can no longer produce the funding required to maintain, let alone expand, the transportation infrastructure without a massive increase in duty rates. Such an increase would be highly regressive: hitting poorer families with older, less fuel-efficient cars the hardest while having least impact on more affluent consumers able to purchase new (or at least newer) vehicles. 

Tolling major roads can cause drivers to divert to smaller roads while geo-tolling raises privacy concerns and some believe it could penalise those living in rural areas. Others may advocate a mileage tax, perhaps collected during the already mandatory annual inspections, as a simple to administer scheme that retains the user-pays principal. But such a system would be open to driver abuse (on existing vehicles at least).

And then there is the issue of whether cross-subsidies between private and public transport are desirable and necessary or need eliminating.

So what should be done?

These are political decisions - and tough ones at that.

From the public’s point of view they perceive governments wanting to add a new ‘tax’ on top of an old one. What would be publically more acceptable (and simpler to administer) would be replacing one rigid, outdated and regressive revenue raising system with one better suited to deal with the current situation and capable of future adaptation.

All those options are available; the technology is ready but what’s missing is a political decision. That will take leadership but that is why politicians seek office.The only certainty is that the longer these decisions are delayed, the higher the bills
will be for rectifying the accumulated deterioration of the existing infrastructure. That’s even before administrations start considering the new roads (with ITS/connected vehicle infrastructure), rail and metro lines that will be needed in the Smart Cities of the future.

In the end it must be better to make a decision – even if it turns out that the optimum system was not selected – to raise the funds that will enable authorities to start repairing and updating the transportation infrastructure.

After all, it will be easier and cheaper to modify an imperfect revenue raising system on functioning infrastructure than allowing another decade of deterioration, increasing congestion and extending travel times.

Now that’s the kind of thinking that will create smart cities.

Related Content

  • TikTok’s Mr Barricade speaks out
    August 27, 2021
    Civil engineer Vignesh Swaminatham (aka Mr Barricade) shares his thoughts with Adam Hill about TikTok, infrastructure, ITS, quick-build projects, bike lanes, inequality, local politics - and dancing
  • Transcore challenges perceptions, targets broader markets
    December 13, 2012
    In August this year, Tracy Marks took over the presidency of TransCore, succeeding John Simler, who has moved on to other roles within parent company Roper Industries. A 19-year veteran of the company, Marks describes himself as having been groomed for the job. Previously responsible for TransCore’s Southern region in the US, he also took on a series of roles, including the top job at United Toll Systems, as part of moves which were carefully choreographed to prepare him for where he is now. The appointmen
  • Transport in the round
    October 13, 2015
    The ITF’s Mary Crass tells Colin Sowman why future transport demands will require governments to overcome the silo effect of individual single-modal authorities. The only global multimodal transport policy organisation,” is how Mary Crass describes the International Transport Forum (ITF), which is housed at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). As head of policy and summit preparation at the ITF she says: “All other organisations are either regional or have a modal focus, we cove
  • Tolls ‘on the rise as highway funding dries up’
    April 9, 2015
    The US-based Brookings Institution has commented on the highway funding debate in the US in a paper by Robert Puentes, a senior fellow with the Institution’s Metropolitan Policy Program He says that, as uncertainties abound over federal transportation spending and another shortfall in the Highway Trust Fund looms, states and localities are stepping up to address their infrastructure challenges head on. By raising gas taxes, launching ballot initiatives, and forging public-private partnerships, regions ar