Toll road privatization
may result in indirect
impacts
January 14, 2008
PHYSORG.com
Privatizing toll roads
in the U.S. may result
in significant
diversions of truck
traffic from privatized
toll roads to "free"
roads, and may result in
more crashes and
increased costs
associated with use of
other roads, according
to a new study.
Peter Swan of Penn State
– Harrisburg and Michael
Belzer of Wayne State
University will present
the findings of their
study, "Empirical
Evidence of Toll Road
Traffic Diversion and
Implications for Highway
Infrastructure
Privatization" on Jan.
14 at the 87th annual
meeting of the
Transportation Research
Board in Washington,
D.C.
The study used data from
the State of Ohio, the
Federal Highway
Administration, and the
Ohio Turnpike to predict
annual Turnpike truck
vehicle miles traveled,
and therefore diverted
vehicle miles, based on
National truck traffic
and Turnpike rates. The
researchers then compare
estimated truck traffic
diverted from the
Turnpike to truck
traffic on Ohio road
segments on possible
substitute routes.
Both economic models
support the hypothesis
that rate increases
divert traffic from toll
roads to "free" roads.
"While recently
privatized roads do not
have enough history to
determine how high
actual rates will rise,
adequate data do exist
to determine what
happens when toll rates
increase dramatically on
state-run toll roads,"
says co-author Peter
Swan, Assistant
Professor of Logistics
and Operations
Management at Penn
State's Harrisburg
campus.
The study concludes that
if governments allow
private toll road
operators to maximize
profits, higher tolls
will divert trucks to
local roads, depending
on the suitability of
substitute roads. The
authors estimate that
for 2005, a for-profit,
private operator of the
Ohio Turnpike could have
raised tolls to roughly
three times what they
were under the public
turnpike authority,
resulting in about a 40%
diversion of trucks from
the Ohio Turnpike to
other roads.
"The Ohio Turnpike
substantially increased
tolls during the 1990s
to help finance
construction of a third
lane in each direction
over substantial
portions of the
Turnpike," the
researchers say.
"Because the Ohio
Turnpike raised its
rates for trucks in the
1990s and later lowered
them again, sufficient
data exist to calculate
a demand curve for the
Turnpike based on demand
and the toll rate. We
then use the resulting
demand curve to estimate
diversion of trucks
caused by the changes in
the toll rates and to
forecast how toll rates
might affect Turnpike
truck revenue."
The number of diverted
trucks is important to
both the State of Ohio
and the Nation for
economic and social
reasons.
First, many of the
substitute roads are
two-lane highways with
crash rates many times
that of the Turnpike.
Second, the increased
traffic has reduced the
quality of life for
communities located
along diversion routes
and dramatically
increased the
maintenance costs of
many of these roads, say
the researchers.
Finally, higher truck
tolls have two negative
effects on the economy.
Motor carriers
eventually pass all
tolls to consumers in
the form of higher
prices for goods. While
higher toll rates may
not decrease the
efficiency of
non-diverted trucks,
they have raised costs.
Furthermore, diversion
reduces the efficiency
of these trucks because
they clearly are taking
a second-best route. The
resulting loss of
efficiency can stifle
economic activity,
according to the study.
Many of these economic
and social costs may not
be considered in future
leases or sales,
especially when such
costs are paid by people
in states other than the
one making the lease
agreement.
The study researchers
question whether it
makes good policy sense
to substitute the
existing fuel tax-based
system of funding road
infrastructure with a
system that uses
widespread tolls and to
grant long-term leases
to private enterprises
that will operate them
for profit.
"The combination of
inadequate maintenance,
lack of capital for new
capacity, and
ever-growing demand has
led to renewed calls for
tolls," Swan and Belzer
state. "It is curious
that national policy
clearly supports sales
or long-term leases of
roads to private parties
when such negative
results can be expected.
"It does not appear that
the U.S. Department of
Transportation has
considered how far
tolling and highway
privatization should go
... how such a
market-based system of
interstate highways will
affect the parallel
system of publicly-owned
state and local roads
... or the effect of
private tolling on
interstate commerce -
unless U.S. DOT is
already committed to the
toll-based funding for
all roads."
"If the true problem is
that political leaders
are unwilling to face
the voters with the
reality that there is no
free lunch, then the
problem we seek to solve
by tolling and
privatization will not
solve the problem at
all. In fact, our
research suggests that
it will only make the
problem worse," Swan and
Belzer say.