by jaws » Fri 29 Apr 2005, 23:36:25
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EddieB', 'S')orry, but I have to disagree about privatizing roads. I think privatizing roads is a bad idea because they are natural monopolies. You can argue that "taking another road" is always an option, but in fact it isn't. If you live right by a toll booth you can't get around it. Things that are useful to the public - roads, railroads, waterways, water supplies - should have governement oversight. That's not to say we do it right... but privatizing could make things much worse.
Subisidizing interstates the way we have was a terrible misallocation of resources, I know. But argueing in favor of letting businesses control commerce in natural monopolies isn't going to solve the problem.
Highways are certainly not natural monopolies. There are plenty of other forms of transportation, such as trains, canal shipping and air shipping that can bypass highways for long-haul shipping, and mass transit and "surface" roads for commuting. They only seem like a natural monopoly because they have been so heavily subsidized that alternative methods of transportation have all but disappeared from common use.
I have never seen any area that was only linked to the outside world by a limited access highway. Generally they only exist to provide faster access with more traffic capacity.