India's Transport Sector : The Challenges Ahead, Volume 1. Main Report

India's transport system--especially surface transport--is seriously deficient, and its services are highly inefficient by international standards. The economic losses from congestion and poor roads are estimated at 120 to 300 billion rupees a year. This report takes a critical assessment of the key policy and institutional issues that continue to contribute to the poor performance of the transport sector in India. After an introduction, Chapter 2 provides an overview of rapid demand change and poor supply response, and the resulting adverse impacts on the Indian economy and society. Chapter 3 examines the causes of poor supply response by focusing on four major problems: unclear responsibilities, inadequate resource mobilization, poor asset management, and inadequate imposition of accountability. Chapter 4 reviews recent reforms and lessons learned. Chapter 5 proposes short to medium term actions for each of the main transport subsectors. Three factors make it particularly opportune time for India to expedite transport reform: 1) Initial reform momentum has been built up. 2) There is a growing consensus within India that transport should be managed as an economic sector. 3) There are many successful models for transport reform from around the world. The resistance to reform should be overcome considering the high cost of slow or inadequate action to the Indian economy and society.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Economic & Sector Work biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2002-05-10
Subjects:ACCIDENTS, ACCOUNTABILITY, ADB, ASSET MANAGEMENT, BALANCE SHEET, BASIC ACCESS, BOTTLENECKS, BUS SERVICE, BUS SERVICES, CAR OWNERSHIP, CEMENT, CIVIL SERVICE, CONCESSIONS, CONGESTION, DECENTRALIZATION, DISPOSABLE INCOME, DRAINAGE, DRIVING, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC REFORM, ENGINE, EXPRESSWAYS, FARES, FISCAL POLICY, FISCAL YEAR, FRAMEWORK, HIGHWAY CAPACITY, HIGHWAYS, HOUSEHOLDS, HOUSING, INCOME, INVENTORY, LAND ACQUISITION, LAND TRANSPORT, LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, MAIN TRANSPORT, METROPOLITAN CITIES, METROPOLITAN TRANSPORT, MIXED TRAFFIC, MOBILITY, MODAL INTEGRATION, MOTOR VEHICLE, MOTOR VEHICLE EMISSIONS, MOTORIZED TRANSPORT, NOISE, PASSENGER, PASSENGER CARS, PASSENGER TRANSPORT, PIERS, PORTS, POVERTY REDUCTION, PRIVATE PARTICIPATION, PRIVATIZATION, PRODUCTIVITY, PROFITABILITY, PUBLIC AGENCIES, PUBLIC INVESTMENTS, RAIL TRANSPORT, RAILWAYS, RESOURCE MOBILIZATION, ROAD ASSETS, ROAD FINANCING, ROAD PAVEMENT, ROAD SAFETY, ROAD SECTOR, ROAD TRANSPORT, ROAD USERS, ROUTES, RURAL AREAS, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, RURAL ROADS, SAFETY ISSUES, SOCIAL SERVICES, STEEL, STRUCTURES, SUSTAINABILITY, TAXATION, TRAFFIC ENGINEERING, TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT, TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT PLANNING, TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT SCHEMES, TRAFFIC POLICE, TRAFFIC RULES, TRANSPORT, TRANSPORT AUTHORITY, TRANSPORT DEREGULATION, TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORT MODE, TRANSPORT PLANNING, TRANSPORT POLICY, TRANSPORT REFORM, TRANSPORT SECTOR, TRANSPORT SYSTEM, TRUCKS, URBAN BUS, URBAN BUS TRANSPORT, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, URBAN TRANSPORT, URBAN TRANSPORT PROJECT, URBANIZATION, USER CHARGES, VEHICLE EMISSIONS, VEHICLE REGISTRATION, VEHICLES TRANSPORT, TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS, TRANSPORT SYSTEMS, RESPONSIBILITY, RESOURCES MOBILIZATION, ROADS & HIGHWAYS, DEMAND GROWTH, TRANSPORT MANAGEMENT, INLAND WATERWAYS, AIR TRANSPORT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/05/1937501/india-indias-transport-sector-challenges-ahead-vol-1-2-main-report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15405
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!

Similar Items