Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Road pricing and provision : changed traffic conditions ahead / edited by Michael de Percy and John Wanna.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: ANZSOG (Series)Publisher: Acton, A.C.T. : ANU Press, 2018Copyright date: ©2018Description: 1 online resource (xxiv, 172 pages) : colour illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781760462314
  • 1760462314
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 388.114 23
LOC classification:
  • HE336.T64 R633 2018
Online resources:
Contents:
Foreword / Ian Harper -- Preface: The importance of road pricing / Mike Mrdak -- Section 1: Introduction. Introduction: Shaping the road pricing and provision debate / Michael de Percy -- Road pricing and road provision in Australia: Where are we and how did we get here? / Michael de Percy -- Section 2: Long-term planning. Reforming transport planning in Australia / Marion Terrill -- How to deliver better infrastructure planning / Philip Davies -- Singapore's land transport management plan / Teik Soon Looi -- Section 3: Road pricing. Is pricing road transport significantly different to pricing other network infrastructure? / Alex Robson -- Using road pricing as a viable option to meet Australia's future road funding needs / Brendan Lyon -- Lessons from Auckland in road transport planning: Making trade-offs transparent / Peter Winder -- Section 4: Turning theory into practice. Winning public support for transport reforms / Gary Banks -- Assessing the likelihood of proposed reform pathways to road pricing in Australia: Do they necessarily involve 'diabolical politics'? / John Wanna.
Review: Road pricing is not a new concept - toll roads have existed in Australia since Governor Macquarie established one from Sydney to Parramatta in 1811 - and distance-based charging schemes have been trialled and implemented with varying success overseas. But how would full market reform of roads look in a federation like Australia? In its responses to the 2016 Australian Infrastructure Plan and the 2015 Competition Policy Review, the Australian Government explicitly supported investigating cost-reflective road pricing as a long-term reform option, and has committed to establishing a study chaired by an eminent Australian to look into the potential impacts of road pricing reform on road users. The challenges we face in this space are manifold and complex, and we still have a long road ahead of us. However, with advocacy for reform coming from interest groups as diverse as governments, private transport companies, peak industry bodies, policy think tanks and state motoring clubs, there is now more support than ever before for changing the way we provide for and fund our roads. This book seeks to advance the road reform agenda by presenting some of the latest thinking on road pricing and provision from a variety of disciplinary approaches - researchers, economists and public sector leaders. It stresses the need for reform to ensure Australians can enjoy the benefits of efficient and sustainable transport infrastructure as our population and major metropolitan cities continue to grow. Traffic congestion is avoidable, but we must act soon. The works presented here all point to the need for change - the expertise and the technology are available, and the various reform options have been mapped out in some detail. It is time for the policy debate to shift to how, rather than if, road reform should progress.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

Includes bibliographical references.

Foreword / Ian Harper -- Preface: The importance of road pricing / Mike Mrdak -- Section 1: Introduction. Introduction: Shaping the road pricing and provision debate / Michael de Percy -- Road pricing and road provision in Australia: Where are we and how did we get here? / Michael de Percy -- Section 2: Long-term planning. Reforming transport planning in Australia / Marion Terrill -- How to deliver better infrastructure planning / Philip Davies -- Singapore's land transport management plan / Teik Soon Looi -- Section 3: Road pricing. Is pricing road transport significantly different to pricing other network infrastructure? / Alex Robson -- Using road pricing as a viable option to meet Australia's future road funding needs / Brendan Lyon -- Lessons from Auckland in road transport planning: Making trade-offs transparent / Peter Winder -- Section 4: Turning theory into practice. Winning public support for transport reforms / Gary Banks -- Assessing the likelihood of proposed reform pathways to road pricing in Australia: Do they necessarily involve 'diabolical politics'? / John Wanna.

Road pricing is not a new concept - toll roads have existed in Australia since Governor Macquarie established one from Sydney to Parramatta in 1811 - and distance-based charging schemes have been trialled and implemented with varying success overseas. But how would full market reform of roads look in a federation like Australia? In its responses to the 2016 Australian Infrastructure Plan and the 2015 Competition Policy Review, the Australian Government explicitly supported investigating cost-reflective road pricing as a long-term reform option, and has committed to establishing a study chaired by an eminent Australian to look into the potential impacts of road pricing reform on road users. The challenges we face in this space are manifold and complex, and we still have a long road ahead of us. However, with advocacy for reform coming from interest groups as diverse as governments, private transport companies, peak industry bodies, policy think tanks and state motoring clubs, there is now more support than ever before for changing the way we provide for and fund our roads. This book seeks to advance the road reform agenda by presenting some of the latest thinking on road pricing and provision from a variety of disciplinary approaches - researchers, economists and public sector leaders. It stresses the need for reform to ensure Australians can enjoy the benefits of efficient and sustainable transport infrastructure as our population and major metropolitan cities continue to grow. Traffic congestion is avoidable, but we must act soon. The works presented here all point to the need for change - the expertise and the technology are available, and the various reform options have been mapped out in some detail. It is time for the policy debate to shift to how, rather than if, road reform should progress.

Added to collection customer.56279.3

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.