HIGHWAY ECONOMY
INTRODUCTION:
Governments
have, of necessity, provided certain facilities that the private sector could
not furnish. Among them are highways and public transportation. The intents of
the expenditure for highways are to raise the level of the entire economy by
providing for ready transportation of goods; to assist in problems of national defense;
to make easier the provision of community services such as police and fire
protection, medical care, schooling, and delivery of the mails; and to open
added opportunities for recreation and travel. Highways benefit the landowner because
ready access makes his property more valuable. Their improvement benefits the
motor-vehicle user through reduced cost of vehicle operation, savings in time,
reduction in accidents, and increased comfort and ease of driving. On the other
hand, road improvements consume resources, including land, which might be used for
other productive purposes by individuals or by government and the vehicles
travelling produce air pollution and noise. From the point of view of resources use, then, highways can be
justified only if, in net sum, the consequences are favorable-that is, if cost
reductions to highway users and other beneficiaries of the improvement exceed
the costs, including some allowance for the return on the money invested. There
are as has been indicated before, numerous other factors to be considered, but
this chapter focuses on the economic or resource-use phases.
Highway economy was under discussion
over a century ago. W.M Gillespie, professor of civil engineering at Union
College, in his Manual of the Principles and Practice of Road Marking, stated
that “A minimum of expenses is of course highly desirable; but the road which
is truly the cheapest is not the one which has cost the least money, but the
one which makes the most profitable returns in proportion to the amount
expended upon it.”
The first detailed attention to
highway economy developed about 40 years ago at lowa State College. It focused
largely on the relative economy of various roads surfacing and, later, on the costs
of motor-vehicle operation. The advent of the state wide planning surveys with the
masses of data developed by them brought attention to many other factors of
importance to the overall problem. Even so, attention to highway economy as a
topic for detailed research and analysis has been small and sporadic. An accepting
was that economic comparisons of alternative routes on the Interstate System
were required by federal regulations. Many of these were based on the so-called
Red-Book, developed by the AASHO Committee on the Highway Design. Further impetus
for economic analysis on federal-aid projects many come through the Federal-Aid
Highway Act of 1970 (Sect. 186) which required that in 1972 the Federal Highway
Administration.
A Framework for Highway Economy
Studies:
Possibly the most difficult and
error-prone phase of economy studies lies in placing the study in the proper
framework or perspective. And if this phase is done incorrectly, inputs of the
most reliable data and flawless procedures for analysis will still give
erroneous results. Some of the guidelines to be followed in developing this
framework are:
1. Economy
studies are concentrated with forecasting the future consequences of possible
investments of resources. Past happenings, unless they affect the future, are not
considered. This “forward” look is distinctly different from the “backward”
look of accounting practice. This difference is illustrated by the discussion
of incremental and sunk costs later in this chapter.
2. Each
alternative among which choices are to be made must be fully and clearly
spelled out. As an example, if a freeway is proposed to parallel a busy street,
there will be vehicle operating cost savings not only to those diverted to the
freeway but, possibly, also to the remaining travelers on the street. On the
other hand, traffic using this same freeway could increase congestion and
vehicle operating costs on other traffic arteries. This likewise should be
recognized. Thus, the first step in analysis is to make a complete list of
consequences, both economic and other.
A clear distinction
must be made between economic analysis (the use of resources) and financial
considerations (the use of money). It has already been indicated in Chapt. 03
that decision making involve dealing with three elements in sequence. These are
(a) economic, which is the use of resources; (b) financial, which deals with
getting and expending money and, (c) political and administrative, a catchall
phrase for all the no quantifiable forces that bear on the decision. It was
also indicated that rational decisions were more likely to be reached if the
best alternative from an economic point of view were tested in sequence for its
financial and political and administrative viability. It this alternative failed
either of these two tests the next most viable alternative would then be
examined, and so on. In the past
analysts sometimes erroneously have included financial considerations in
economy studies. A first illustration is the practice of including interest as
a cost only if money is to be borrowed to finance a project. But it can be seen
that, regardless of the source of funds, the same resources will be consumed in
constructing, maintaining, and operating the proposed highway whether the
project is financed with borrowed funds or with current revenues. Two more among
the common situations where financial thinking can lead to errors in economy
studies involve allocated and sunk costs.
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