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Is Freight Too Cheap

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TRB Special Report 271 'Freight Capacity in the 21st Century' is my source text ... users (e.g., barge operators) pay only a tiny share of capital or operating ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Is Freight Too Cheap


1
Is Freight Too Cheap??
  • Douglass B. Lee, Jr.
  • Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting
  • January 2003

2
Topic
  • Is Freight Too Cheap?
  • i.e., is the price of freight transportation to
    the user or shipper too low?
  • What is the correct price?
  • Criterion economic efficiency
  • Should government seek to keep transportation
    prices artificially low?
  • No, but not something I will try to cover right
    now

3
Recommended Reading
  • TRB Special Report 271 Freight Capacity in the
    21st Century is my source text and launching
    pad.
  • wherever capital investment is mentioned, it is
    emphasized that revenues should come from user
    charges

4
Some Symptoms
  • growing congestion on some highway links
  • slowing in the rate of additions to capacity
    (growth in highway VMT exceeds growth in lane
    miles)
  • rail infrastructure has been downsized, and
    suffered large service disruptions from mergers
  • congestion at terminals and border crossings
  • lengthening lead times and rising costs of
    infrastructure projects
  • freight-passenger conflicts in cities (loading,
    drayage, ROW, truck and rail externalities)
  • unfunded needs such as for port infrastructure

5
Public/Private Sector Roles
  • Transportation is complex mix of public and
    private
  • provision of infrastructure (both)
  • operation of facilities (both)
  • financing of capital costs (both)
  • collection of user fees (both)
  • regulation to control environmental
    externalities, ensure safety, protect consumers
    from monopoly power, control international
    commerce (governments)

6
Theory (Efficiency)
  • Microeconomic theory
  • (1) Price at marginal cost in the short run,
    ensuring at the margin that each usage pays for
    the immediate consequences (to society) of that
    use.
  • (2) In the long require that firms pay all their
    costs from revenues they receive for the product
    or service they supply.

7
  • Under reasonable conditions (CRTS), these
    conditions are compatible
  • short run costs rise above average variable cost
    as capacity is approached.
  • multipart and discriminatory pricing are
    permitted and desirable (e.g., negotiated
    contracts, yield management).
  • Evidence of price too low or too high is derived
    from market characteristics, rather than
    comparing an absolute level against a norm
  • by looking at distorting influences, we can
    estimate the direction and magnitude of deviation
    of price from the efficient ideal.

8
Interpretation of LR Costs
  • All costs that would be incurred by a private
    firm in doing business
  • operation
  • capital (including borrowing or ROR)
  • general taxes (income, sales, property)
  • Plus externalities

9
Transportation Market
10
Price Below SR/LR Cost
  • Direct Subsidy payments to suppliers to cover
    costs not recovered from consumers
  • e.g., transit capital and operating costs
  • government grants to highway agencies
  • In-Kind Subsidy provision of service to
    suppliers at a price below cost to provide
  • e.g., highway services to trucks at below cost
  • favorable borrowing rates, risk assumption
  • tax exemption

11
Examples
  • Highways
  • prices too low in short run where there is
    congestion.
  • insufficient user revenues in long run to cover
    even government expenditures (about 25
    shortfall).
  • other costs (tax expenditures, borrowing subsidy,
    lack of ROI, air and noise pollution) raise
    shortfall to about 15 cents per mile.
  • if revenues lt LR costs, then either (1) prices
    are too low, (2) capacity is too large, or (3)
    both.

12
Bostons Central Artery Project (Big Dig)
  • 7.5 mile vehicle trip has a long run cost for
    infrastructure alone of about 20, almost none
    paid by users for use of the facility

13
  • Highways (contd)
  • new projects that could not possibly recover
    their costs from users seem excessive.
  • even toll roads cannot recover their full costs,
    and they benefit from a network of underpriced
    feeder roads.
  • railroads pay market rates for capital and also
    pay local property taxes, but not sales taxes.
  • trucking SW regulation is not especially
    binding, and deregulation of routes and prices
    has lowered costs of drivers while improving
    productivity

14
  • Inland Waterways
  • excluding Great Lakes shipping, inland waterways
    account for 11 of ton miles but only 1 of
    freight expenditures, i.e., it is cheap
  • users (e.g., barge operators) pay only a tiny
    share of capital or operating costs of the
    facilities, yet are now demanding the doubling
    lock length from 600 to 1200 feet so they wont
    have to break tows in half.
  • no congestion charges or other fees directly
    related to usage that would lead to more
    efficient behavior
  • ACE estimates benefits of upgrade at small
    fraction of capital costs

15
  • Ports
  • ports have unused capacity, receive funding from
    government sources, charge ships very little.
  • ports are reluctant to raise fees for fear of
    diverting traffic to other ports.
  • monopolistic shipping lines game ports to
    overprovide capacity.
  • ports want expanded facilities and deeper
    channels to handle bigger ships, paid for by the
    federal government.
  • ports also want direct access to railroads for
    double-stack container trains.
  • Boston has wisely decided to retire from the
    field.

16
Government Failure
  • Government Supplier
  • investment decision ostensibly consistent with
    BCA, but practice is weak
  • political pressures overwhelm even those agencies
    seeking to be efficient
  • result is underpricing combined with investment
    to satisfy peak demand, using general public
    revenues

17
  • Government as Financier
  • private firms seek market advantage through
    government action (rent seeking)
  • pressure to provide subsidy for public good,
    stimulate economy, just to get started, etc...
  • each subsidy expands constituency to further
    expand the subsidy
  • easier to provide countervailing subsidy so as to
    level the playing field than to eliminate the
    subsidy to all players

18
Efficient Results
  • Highways higher user charges, smaller network
  • Inland Waterways major consolidation of network,
    much higher user charges
  • Ports smaller number of perhaps larger ports,
    much higher fees on ships
  • Railroads still rationalizing network, but on
    track
  • Airports higher landing fees, especially at
    congested airports.
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