Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and Politics

Transportation infrastructure such as highways and bridges requires upgrades and maintenance. In many U.S. regions, these requirements have surpassed current funding, so new solutions are needed. One obvious though imperfect source is gasoline taxes, but raising these is politically risky, regardles...

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Main Authors: Linda M. Fogg, Lawrence C. Hamilton, Erin S. Bell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-10-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020963609
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spelling doaj-00c5bb342e884c09a42f5db3482f5f242020-11-25T03:56:15ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402020-10-011010.1177/2158244020963609Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and PoliticsLinda M. Fogg0Lawrence C. Hamilton1Erin S. Bell2University of New Hampshire, Durham, USAUniversity of New Hampshire, Durham, USAUniversity of New Hampshire, Durham, USATransportation infrastructure such as highways and bridges requires upgrades and maintenance. In many U.S. regions, these requirements have surpassed current funding, so new solutions are needed. One obvious though imperfect source is gasoline taxes, but raising these is politically risky, regardless of need. To illuminate this conflict, we analyze data from four random-sample telephone surveys (2016–2018, n = 2,035) that asked residents in the U.S. state of New Hampshire about their perceptions of highway and bridge conditions, and support for gas tax increases. About one third of the respondents counterfactually reported that highway and bridge conditions had improved compared with 10 or 20 years ago. At the county level, subjective perceptions correlate well with actual pavement and bridge conditions. Majorities of respondents also said they would support tax increases of 5 of 10 cents, although support falls off at higher amounts. Support for a tax increase varies not only with the proposed amount, but also with individual characteristics—especially political identity. In a structural equation model, infrastructure perceptions serve as an intervening variable between ideology and tax support: if infrastructure is falsely seen as improving, that supports an ideologically favored rejection of taxes. Partisan differences in perceptions of physical conditions, noted previously in other domains such as climate change, pose an unexpected challenge in building public support for transportation infrastructure.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020963609
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda M. Fogg
Lawrence C. Hamilton
Erin S. Bell
spellingShingle Linda M. Fogg
Lawrence C. Hamilton
Erin S. Bell
Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and Politics
SAGE Open
author_facet Linda M. Fogg
Lawrence C. Hamilton
Erin S. Bell
author_sort Linda M. Fogg
title Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and Politics
title_short Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and Politics
title_full Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and Politics
title_fullStr Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and Politics
title_full_unstemmed Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and Politics
title_sort views of the highway: infrastructure reality, perceptions, and politics
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Transportation infrastructure such as highways and bridges requires upgrades and maintenance. In many U.S. regions, these requirements have surpassed current funding, so new solutions are needed. One obvious though imperfect source is gasoline taxes, but raising these is politically risky, regardless of need. To illuminate this conflict, we analyze data from four random-sample telephone surveys (2016–2018, n = 2,035) that asked residents in the U.S. state of New Hampshire about their perceptions of highway and bridge conditions, and support for gas tax increases. About one third of the respondents counterfactually reported that highway and bridge conditions had improved compared with 10 or 20 years ago. At the county level, subjective perceptions correlate well with actual pavement and bridge conditions. Majorities of respondents also said they would support tax increases of 5 of 10 cents, although support falls off at higher amounts. Support for a tax increase varies not only with the proposed amount, but also with individual characteristics—especially political identity. In a structural equation model, infrastructure perceptions serve as an intervening variable between ideology and tax support: if infrastructure is falsely seen as improving, that supports an ideologically favored rejection of taxes. Partisan differences in perceptions of physical conditions, noted previously in other domains such as climate change, pose an unexpected challenge in building public support for transportation infrastructure.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020963609
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