SELF-ASSESSMENT TASK
8.2
A tale of two cities: Delhi and Singapore
Contrary to what many may believe, the worst traff ic
congestion is to be found in emerging economies that are
experiencing a boom in car ownership. India’s capital,
Delhi, is no exception.
Recent reports suggest that very shortly peak traff ic
speeds will be little more than 5 km per hour. Delhi’s
congestion problems are the worst in the whole of India
and four times worse than Mumbai. The problem is on
the demand side; Delhi has more than six million vehicles,
with 1,200 new ones being added each day. At the same
time, the supply of road space lags behind. This can only
have negative results: commuter stress, loss of valuable
working time, excessive exhaust fumes polluting the air
and wastage of fuel. The only way out in the eyes of the
current administration is to pump money into the public
transport system. By 2020, if Delhi is to not be facing
gridlock, public transport needs to be carrying 80% of all
trips made in the city as against 40% at present. A big ask!
At the same time there is now a remarkable consensus
among economists that road pricing is the only way
in which congestion problems can be resolved. It is
seen as a sensible way of dealing with the problem of a
scarce resource, road space, which is ineff iciently used
and, as a consequence, generates substantial costs to
the community. Road pricing, whereby there is a direct
charge to use congested roads, is a fair and logical
outcome to what is a classic example of market failure.
For many years the Singapore government has imposed
high customs duties on imported cars and set stiff
registration fees and high annual road taxes. In addition
it requires anybody buying a new car to get a permit,
currently priced at between S$27,000 and S$49,000, well
above the average annual income per head. If this were
not enough, for the past 30 years, to enter a restricted
city zone, drivers must pay a $2 flat rate charge in the
morning peak period, falling to $1.30 at off -peak times.
When the peak charge was extended to the rush hour in
1989, it further reduced traff ic.
From spring 1998, a new automatic ‘pay-as-you-go’ system
replaced the above rather crude system. Using the latest
microchip technology, charging is automatic (smart cards
can be pre-loaded up to S$150) and is based on the actual
contribution to congestion made by individual car users.
The system is now well established. To the economist it is in
many respects a ‘dream ticket’ – it matches in full the well-
known ‘polluter pays’ principle so strenuously advocated in
textbooks yet so very rarely applied in practice.
But will it work in Delhi? This is highly problematic, not
least because, unlike Singapore, Delhi does not currently
have a world-class public transport system to provide a
realistic alternative for urban travellers. There are many
other issues as well.
Source:
Adapted from
India Today
, 23 July 2012.
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