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Road to Ruin?
In its latest issue, Business Week weighs in with a cover story on the push to privatize the nation's highways, bridges, and airports, among other public infrastructure. This growing trend, which Jim Ridgeway and I explored in MoJo's January/February issue, is now moving along at a feverish clip, propelled by investment banks and foreign companies who see in these low-risk assets the prospect of enormous and steady returns, not to mention, as Business Week puts it, "monopolistic advantages that keep those cash flows as steady as a beating heart." For would-be privateers, it doesn't hurt that this model is enthusiastically backed by the Bush administration and a cadre of ardent free marketeers within the Department of Transportation.
With cash-strapped states struggling as it is, the time is ripe for private firms to offer large upfront payments in exchange for long-term leases on public infrastructure (a foreign consortium, for instance, paid $3.8 billion for a 75-year concession on Indiana's 157-mile toll road last summer). “All told," Business Week reports, "some $100 billion worth of public property could change hands in the next two years, up from less than $7 billion over the past two years; a lease for the Pennsylvania Turnpike could go for more than $30 billion all by itself." As Mark Florian, the COO of Goldman Sachs' North American infrastructure division told the magazine, "There's a lot of value trapped in these assets.” You'll often hear privatization proponents like Florian -- who has canvassed the nation pitching this concept to state and local governments -- speak of the value that's locked up in public infrastructure. Left unsaid, however, is that upon being “liberated” the majority of this value will flow directly into the pockets of the investors who are lobbying so aggressively for privatization, not to the taxpayers who technically own these assets and who have funded their construction and operation.
While there is certainly a case to be made for public-private partnerships, as these arrangements are often called, there are numerous public policy questions that have yet to be adequately addressed. One, as Business Week points out, has to do with the "quality of service on deals that can span 100 years.”
The newly private toll roads are being managed well now, but owners could sell them to other parties that might not operate them as capably in the future. Already, the experience outside of toll roads has been mixed: The Atlanta city water system, for example, was so poorly managed by private owners that the government reclaimed it.
Then there's the issue of pricing, since the companies who have thus far secured leases on U.S. infrastructure, particularly toll roads, have been give wide latitude to hike tolls.
Chicago's Skyway could see car tolls rise from $2 in 2005 to $5 by 2017. For some perspective, if a similar scheme were applied to the Pennsylvania Turnpike during its 67 years of existence, the toll for traveling from the Delaware River to the Ohio border would be as much as $553 now instead of $22.75. Macquarie, which teamed up with Spain's Cintra to purchase the Chicago Skyway and the Indiana Toll Road, underscored the governmental trade-off during a presentation at the recent White House Surface Transportation Legislative Leadership Summit: "More Money or Lower Tolls." In an extreme scenario, governments could begin to sell properties that aren't tolled to private owners who will impose fees.
Of course, tolls won't go to the moon if they result in dramatic reductions in traffic. For example, investment firm NW Financial Group estimates that if the Chicago Skyway pricing scheme were applied to New York's Holland Tunnel over its 80 years, it would cost $185 to travel through it instead of the current $6. "No one will pay that much," says Murray E. Bleach, president of Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. "It's just not going to happen."
I agree with Bleach that charging $553 and $185 for passage on a toll road is unrealistic. That said, you can bet that the companies who take over toll roads are going to seriously push the envelope in order to maximize returns to their investors, which is one of the ways that the inherent value of these roads is “unlocked.”
In the states where privatization is on the table, including Texas and Pennsylvania, there's strong resistance among citizens as well as public officials. In Texas, as Business Week reports, the state House of Representatives voted in April, by an overwhelming margin, to place a two-year moratorium on privatizing the state's toll road. But it’s unlikely that local opposition will fend off the privatizers who have power, money, and influence to spare. For some time now investment banks have been raising multi-billion dollar infrastructure funds in order to take advantage of opportunities in North America. We reported in January that Goldman's fledgling fund had generated such an outpouring of investor interest that it had surpassed its $3 billion target. According to Business Week, Goldman’s fund now holds some $6.5 billion. That money won’t be sitting idle for long.
While the Business Week piece provides a comprehensive and appropriately skeptical take on the privatization push, it fails to mention a key issue. These deals are rife with the possibility of corruption and cronyism and conflicts of interest. On the latter, Goldman is a prime example. Beyond its persistent lobbying efforts to open U.S. infrastructure to private investment, the firm has acted as an outside financial advisor to states considering public-private partnerships (ostensibly providing disinterested advice to their clients), while simultaneously raising a $6.5 billion fund whose sole purpose is to buy infrastructure on the cheap. Last fall, at a privatization conference in New York, I had the opportunity to ask Goldman's Mark Florian about the firm’s various roles in the emerging infrastructure market. When I asked him whether Goldman wants to be an adviser or an investor in the road business, he replied, simply, "both."
Comments
Of course, one of the things you liberals love to point out is that highways are massively subsidized freebees that allow single occupant cars to be the primary mode of transportation in the US, which heat up the earth and will cause glorious peasant wars over habitable land. Well, cars rule because highways are now “free”. Your socialist democratic buddies BUILT the roads, and the law of “unintended consequences” raises its ugly head, yet again. Railroads ARE private roads. At one time, in the very NEAR past, the railroads actually competed for passengers, competed with the airlines and private cars, AND made a return on the invested capital too. As recently as 1955, one of the ancestors of the current CSX railroad routinely operated passenger trains from Washington DC to Jacksonville Florida at 100 MPH. That was 100 MPH 50 years ago, with 95+% on-time statistics. This was done with private capital. However, your socialist buddies built massive highways and airports, all subsidized by the government, which knocked the passenger trains out of the market. So, perhaps, if people were ACTUALLY paying the TRUE cost of the highways your socialist goal of having the teaming masses packed into busses would be realized.
Personally, I find it ironic that any “liberal in good standing” would complain about ANYTHING that increased the cost of car ownership.
Privatizing toll roads epitomizes politicians abdicating the public trust and responsibility of their office and a sell-out of the welfare of future constituents for the greed of special interests financiers.
Posted by: Dan Jasinski on 05/02/07 at 3:33 PM Respond
From the post: "That said, you can bet that the companies who take over toll roads are going to seriously push the envelope in order to maximize returns to their investors..."
The ability of a company to raise prices is not unlimited. In the absence of a monopoly there is a revenue-maximizing rate for goods and services beyond which customers seek cheaper (if less-convenient) alternatives. And in the US there is rarely only one way to get from Point A to Point B.
Posted by: JSmith on 05/03/07 at 7:35 AM Respond
"you liberals"
Posted by: john
Yeah John, you liberals! Liberals built everything you take for granted in your pious self centered life! By the way the railroads were built largely by the sweat and blood of the immigrants you despise so much,Mexican, Chinese, Irish, on land stolen from private owners.Yes the railroads did offer transportation to many cities. But do you realize that General Motors and the other auto companies bought hundreds of municipal transportation companies,IE trolley and streetcar companies, and closed them down so their was no LOCAL transportation.If you wanted to go ANYWHERE you had to buy a Chevy or Buick or a Ford to get there.The nations roadways were built and maintained with both our tax money and the taxes collected from our parents and their parents so if this is sold or leased to a private company I want my monthly check from the proceeds of these deals.At well over a million dollars a mile just to build, plus the yearly maintenance do you wonder why these companies want to get their hands on these PUBLIC properties? They are there already and all they have to do is come in and start collecting the cash. What about the taxes built into every gallon of gasoline you buy earmarked to pay for the upkeep of our roads.Will the government abolish the gas tax if these roads are privatized? Sure they will. You neo cons really chap my ass. Anything for profit,no matter the consequences. People like you abhor paying any taxes for anything because your tiny mind sees nothing but $$$$$.
Posted by: D.Orion on 05/03/07 at 2:15 PM Respond
Thats the republican party, the pro-life party of killers and ceriminals for profit and world domination.
I totally hate the fact that my religion, catholic, has joined the republican party and is a party to all this death and they call this pro-life. Sounds like pro-death to me.
Posted by: bob t on 05/07/07 at 7:17 AM Respond
The states are not in the same position as the federal government to raise taxes. The federal government should fund the interstate system by charging much more for trucks who wear out the roads at 100 times that of a passenger car. Freight belongs on the rails which are not subsidized. Cars belong on the interstate. The feds can charge X$ per container that is imported into the USA to pay for the interstate FREEWAYS.
Posted by: CPA on 05/07/07 at 7:55 AM Respond
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Posted by: john on 05/02/07 at 10:13 AM Respond