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Sustainable urban rail funding: Insights from a century-long global dataset.

Authors :
Xuto, Praj
Anderson, Richard J.
Graham, Daniel J.
Hörcher, Daniel
Source :
Transport Policy. Jan2023, Vol. 130, p100-115. 16p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

In recent years, urban rail funding has become an increasing concern in some western cities. The underlying issues over ridership and funding has largely been driven by trends such as increasing teleworking and new transport modes like ridesharing, which are likely to further exacerbate funding issues in the aftermath of the worldwide health crisis. This paper contributes to the discussion through the examination of funding within urban rail transport, specifically the strengths and weaknesses of mechanisms that can be used to achieve sustainable, stable long-term funding. A unique, very long-term historical dataset of five large metros around the world was collected for this research, with the analysis based on evidence of actual practices, from a relatively rare organisational perspective. Key results include: i) appropriate fare-setting has been critical for long-term financial health, but is vulnerable to inflation effects and political interference; indexing is important but use of consumer prices has led to revenue erosion in real terms, since wage growth is typically higher. ii) How subsidies are generated can have varying impacts on funding stability and sustainability — dedicated taxes and cross-subsidies from road charges are typically better than direct grants as they are secured by legislation; they also reduce political changes and avoid competing claims from other types of government spending (health, education), as compared with grants. iii) Commercial revenue can be a valuable source for future growth, in light of increased resistance to taxation. Real estate-related revenues in particular can be substantial, as in Hong Kong and Tokyo, with historically faster growth than wages, while also capturing any further value increases from rail system improvements. • Strengths and weaknesses analysis of funding sources, using data from 5 large metros • Fare-setting with appropriate index (wages) is crucial for long-term financial health • How subsidies are generated – intrinsic impacts on funds stability and sustainability • Ideally, subsidies secured multi-year with legislation – avoids competing claims • Real estate enables long-term value capture and revenue growth from rail improvements [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0967070X
Volume :
130
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Transport Policy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160441458
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tranpol.2022.10.005