We took an affordable, efficient and long-lasting mode of transport funded privately by direct value capture and replaced it with an expensive, inefficient and maintenance-intensive system funded by politicians using a blunt tax.
Read MoreWhat this series is meant to do is to pull back the curtain for people who assume that, when we make investments in infrastructure, the government is ultimately getting money back -- through new income tax, sales tax, property tax, etc... -- in an amount that exceeds the cost of the project. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Read MoreThis is a continuation of our in-depth look at the way that cost/benefit analyses are done to justify infrastructure spending, particularly in large grant programs such as the recent TIGER II. Today we are looking at the cost side of the equation.
Read MoreThis is a continuation of our in-depth look at the way that cost/benefit analyses are done. We are talking specifically here about a TIGER II project for an overpass in the city of Staples, MN. Today we're covering the safety, carbon reduction and maintenance arguments.
Read MoreLast week we started our examination of the types of financial analysis that are done to justify infrastructure projects in typical funding programs such as TIGER II. Our analysis today focuses on a project in the city of Staples. The Staples project presents a mechanism to demonstrate, in depth, how a typical cost/benefit analysis is done.
Read MoreMany people assume that, when we invest in infrastructure, "the government" gets back - by whatever means and at whatever level - cumulatively more money than it puts into a project. There are others who know that this is not remotely true.
Read MoreThe second round of Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) grants are landing just as a tumultuous election season is coming to an end. In "normal" times, the grants -- nearly $600 million worth -- would allow politicians to claim they are doing something to, as the name implies, invest in transportation and thus generate an economic recovery. This time around that claim seems to have much less traction.
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