The Long and Winding Path to Private Financing and Regulation of Toll Roads

Road transport has long been the dominant form of transport for freight and passenger movement throughout the world. Because most road projects require investments with long amortization periods and because many projects do not generate enough demand to become self-financing through some type of user fee or toll, the road sector remains in the hands of the public sector to a much greater extent than other transport activities. But governments throughout the world, including those of many poor African and South Asian countries, are commercializing their operations to cut costs, improve user orientation, and increase sector-specific revenue. There seems to be demand for toll roads in specific settings, but the problems met by many of this "first generation" of road concessions-from Mexico to Thailand-have given toll projects a bad reputation. Many mistakes were made, and tolling is obviously not the best solution for every road. Most of the alternatives aim at improving efficiency (lowering costs). But there are many ways of getting the private sector involved in toll roads, thus reducing public sector financing requirements for the sector. Understanding the context in which toll roads are viable is essential both for their initial success and for effective long-run regulation. The authors provide a broad overview of issues at stake from the viewpoint of both privatization teams and regulators responsible for supervising contractual commitments of private operators and the government, to each other and to users.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Estache, Antonio, Romero, Manuel, Strong, John
Language:en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2000-06
Subjects:access roads, accident, accident rates, airports, arterial roads, Asian Toll Road Development, Asian Toll Road Development Program, average daily traffic, black market in toll receipts, Bridge, bridges, bus, commercialization, concession process, concession program, concessionaire, concessionaires, congestion, congestion relievers, Construction, construction company, construction work, corridor, daily traffic, debt, decline in private toll roads, development roads, district roads, domestic passenger, economic growth, experience with toll roads, export, expressways, feeder network, Financing of Roads, flooding, freeways, freight, freight movements, gasoline tax, heavy traffic, heavy traffic demand, high traffic, highway, highway safety, highways, income, interchanges, interest costs, kilometers of toll roads, land acquisition, lighting columns, local authorities, macroeconomic conditions, maintenance, motor vehicles, motorways, municipalities, National Expressway Network, national governments, national road network, national roads, new toll road, number of lanes, number of vehicles, operation and maintenance, options for toll roads, parallel roads, passenger, passenger car unit, passenger movement, pavement, paving, pcu, peak periods, Piers, private operators, private participation, private roads, private sector, private sector concessions, private sector participation, private toll financing, private toll roads, provision of toll roads, public involvement, public sector, public toll financing, public toll roads, public works, railways, range, remote, revenue stream, risk management, road accidents, road capacity, road concessions, road construction, road design, Road Financing, road improvements, road infrastructure, road investment, road investments, road maintenance, road network, road networks, road sector, Road System, road systems, road traffic, Road transport, road users, route, routes, safety, safety regulation, signs, speed, structures, toll collection, toll evasion, Toll financing, toll free, toll revenue, toll revenue pooling, toll revenue pooling system, toll revenues, toll road, toll road concession, toll road development, toll road program, toll road projects, toll road system, toll roads, toll systems, tolling, tolls, traffic, traffic forecast, traffic forecasts, traffic growth, traffic levels, traffic predictions, traffic volume, traffic volumes, transfer concessions, transition economies, transportation, travel time, trips, trucking, trucks, tunnels, urban expressways, urban roads, urban routes, urbanization, vehicle operating costs, vehicles, toll roads & highways, private financing, government regulation, cost effectiveness, service delivery, financial forecast, payment of charges, political risk analysis, regulatory structure, dispute resolution, market competition, performance indicators, information requirements,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21408
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