Alternative Ways of Funding Public Transport
Public transport traditionally has been, and still is, heavily subsidised by local or national governments, which have been motivated by declining average cost arguments, social considerations, and the desire to offer an alternative to private car use. Conventional sources for funding, including gen...
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2001-03-01
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Series: | European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research |
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doaj-3404064c560142518c558aa9b8c5949c2021-07-26T08:52:00ZengTU Delft OpenEuropean Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research1567-71412001-03-0111738910.18757/ejtir.2001.1.1.26292270Alternative Ways of Funding Public TransportBarry Ubbels0Peter Nijkamp1Erik Verhoef2Steve Potter3Marcus Enoch4Department of Spatial Economics, Free University AmsterdamDepartment of Spatial Economics, Free University AmsterdamDepartment of Spatial Economics, Free University AmsterdamFaculty of Technology, The Open UniversityFaculty of Technology, The Open UniversityPublic transport traditionally has been, and still is, heavily subsidised by local or national governments, which have been motivated by declining average cost arguments, social considerations, and the desire to offer an alternative to private car use. Conventional sources for funding, including general taxes on labour, in many occasions have become harder to sustain for various reasons. This paper explores alternative, increasingly implemented, sources of funding, i.e., local charges or taxes that are hypothecated to support (urban) public transport (such as local sales taxes, parking charges etc.). Based on an overview of several case-studies all over the world, it is found that there is a large potential for applying unconventional charging mechanisms. Not only as means of raising financial support for public transport systems, but also as a method of sending appropriate (from a sustainable point of view) pricing signals to transport use.https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/2629 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Barry Ubbels Peter Nijkamp Erik Verhoef Steve Potter Marcus Enoch |
spellingShingle |
Barry Ubbels Peter Nijkamp Erik Verhoef Steve Potter Marcus Enoch Alternative Ways of Funding Public Transport European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research |
author_facet |
Barry Ubbels Peter Nijkamp Erik Verhoef Steve Potter Marcus Enoch |
author_sort |
Barry Ubbels |
title |
Alternative Ways of Funding Public Transport |
title_short |
Alternative Ways of Funding Public Transport |
title_full |
Alternative Ways of Funding Public Transport |
title_fullStr |
Alternative Ways of Funding Public Transport |
title_full_unstemmed |
Alternative Ways of Funding Public Transport |
title_sort |
alternative ways of funding public transport |
publisher |
TU Delft Open |
series |
European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research |
issn |
1567-7141 |
publishDate |
2001-03-01 |
description |
Public transport traditionally has been, and still is, heavily subsidised by local or national governments, which have been motivated by declining average cost arguments, social considerations, and the desire to offer an alternative to private car use. Conventional sources for funding, including general taxes on labour, in many occasions have become harder to sustain for various reasons. This paper explores alternative, increasingly implemented, sources of funding, i.e., local charges or taxes that are hypothecated to support (urban) public transport (such as local sales taxes, parking charges etc.). Based on an overview of several case-studies all over the world, it is found that there is a large potential for applying unconventional charging mechanisms. Not only as means of raising financial support for public transport systems, but also as a method of sending appropriate (from a sustainable point of view) pricing signals to transport use. |
url |
https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/2629 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT barryubbels alternativewaysoffundingpublictransport AT peternijkamp alternativewaysoffundingpublictransport AT erikverhoef alternativewaysoffundingpublictransport AT stevepotter alternativewaysoffundingpublictransport AT marcusenoch alternativewaysoffundingpublictransport |
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