mindstalk: Tohsaka Rin (Rin)
mindstalk ([personal profile] mindstalk) wrote2019-05-23 11:17 pm

The fairness of congestion pricing

https://transfersmagazine.org/longer-view-the-fairness-of-congestion-pricing/

Summary:

Some people object to road pricing on the grounds of it being regressive. But free roads help the rich more: the rich drive more, and the pollution from congestion hurts the poor (living more near freeways and boulevards) more.

In top congested cities, poor households are 14% of the population but only 4% of peak commute traffic.

You have to spend a fair bit of money to get on road in the first place; free roads are more like matching grants than progressive transfers.

Money circulates: what's paid by drivers can be used to help the poor. Time lost in congestion is just lost, no one benefits.
mtbc: photograph of me (Default)

[personal profile] mtbc 2019-05-24 08:02 am (UTC)(link)
That's interesting. Typically my commutes have been rather longer than I'd like because I've not been rich enough to buy somewhere large enough for my family near my workplace.