World Bank’s Engagement with Transport in Cities : The Early Years

This study looks at the project practice in light of the strategy as declared in the sector paper. The main focus is on the first decade of the urban transport lending program (1972–82). By and large, this batch of projects adhered to the strategy, except there was little effort to engage with land use planning. Project investments included roads in slum areas, improvements of radial corridors and central area road networks, fleet and facilities for city- and state-owned public transport operators, and select investments in major road and urban rail projects. On the policy side, projects strove to improve cost recovery of public-owned transport operators, facilitate the private provision of public transport services, designate street space for exclusive use of buses, and introduce congestion charges. In the institutional dimension, projects assisted in setting up traffic management units and some form of metropolitan transport planning entities. Investment outcomes varied. Some projects were highly successful, notably the two projects in Brazil that focused on roads in slums and bus priority. Others were highly disappointing, as in Tehran, where the government went into major road building rather than pursue traffic management and public transport improvements championed by the project. Project policy initiatives produced mixed results with less than complete achievement of cost recovery in public transport services and a failure to introduce congestion charges. Improved regulation of privately provided public transport had several bright spots (e.g., Kuala Lumpur, Calcutta), but also persistent failures (e.g., Kingston). Efforts to set up traffic management units in the city government gave some very good results (e.g., Tunis), but the creation and nurture of metropolitan transport planning institutions turned out to be far more difficult. Overall, these pioneering efforts in both strategy and practice were well conceived and executed and played a catalytic role in most client cities. Weak aspects include overselling traffic management as a substitute (rather than a complement) to road investments, together with failing to evolve a constructive approach to urban road network development in rapidly growing cities. There were no attempts to tackle urban road funding as a part of the national road funding setup. Instead, over-optimistically, several projects attempted to introduce sophisticated price instruments such as congestion charging, which proved a long shot in the weak policy and institutional environments found in many client cities.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mitric, Slobodan
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-07
Subjects:PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION, URBAN TRANSPORT, URBAN POVERTY, RAPID TRANSIT, WORLD BANK STRATEGY, POVERTY ALLEVIATION, TRAFFIC CONGESTION, SERVICE DELIVERY, TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT, URBAN PLANNING, LOCAL GOVERNANCE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/235751532573412101/World-Bank-s-engagement-With-transport-in-cities-the-early-years
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30415
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spelling dig-okr-10986304152021-05-25T09:18:00Z World Bank’s Engagement with Transport in Cities : The Early Years Mitric, Slobodan PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION URBAN TRANSPORT URBAN POVERTY RAPID TRANSIT WORLD BANK STRATEGY POVERTY ALLEVIATION TRAFFIC CONGESTION SERVICE DELIVERY TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT URBAN PLANNING LOCAL GOVERNANCE This study looks at the project practice in light of the strategy as declared in the sector paper. The main focus is on the first decade of the urban transport lending program (1972–82). By and large, this batch of projects adhered to the strategy, except there was little effort to engage with land use planning. Project investments included roads in slum areas, improvements of radial corridors and central area road networks, fleet and facilities for city- and state-owned public transport operators, and select investments in major road and urban rail projects. On the policy side, projects strove to improve cost recovery of public-owned transport operators, facilitate the private provision of public transport services, designate street space for exclusive use of buses, and introduce congestion charges. In the institutional dimension, projects assisted in setting up traffic management units and some form of metropolitan transport planning entities. Investment outcomes varied. Some projects were highly successful, notably the two projects in Brazil that focused on roads in slums and bus priority. Others were highly disappointing, as in Tehran, where the government went into major road building rather than pursue traffic management and public transport improvements championed by the project. Project policy initiatives produced mixed results with less than complete achievement of cost recovery in public transport services and a failure to introduce congestion charges. Improved regulation of privately provided public transport had several bright spots (e.g., Kuala Lumpur, Calcutta), but also persistent failures (e.g., Kingston). Efforts to set up traffic management units in the city government gave some very good results (e.g., Tunis), but the creation and nurture of metropolitan transport planning institutions turned out to be far more difficult. Overall, these pioneering efforts in both strategy and practice were well conceived and executed and played a catalytic role in most client cities. Weak aspects include overselling traffic management as a substitute (rather than a complement) to road investments, together with failing to evolve a constructive approach to urban road network development in rapidly growing cities. There were no attempts to tackle urban road funding as a part of the national road funding setup. Instead, over-optimistically, several projects attempted to introduce sophisticated price instruments such as congestion charging, which proved a long shot in the weak policy and institutional environments found in many client cities. 2018-09-12T16:21:05Z 2018-09-12T16:21:05Z 2018-07 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/235751532573412101/World-Bank-s-engagement-With-transport-in-cities-the-early-years http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30415 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
URBAN TRANSPORT
URBAN POVERTY
RAPID TRANSIT
WORLD BANK STRATEGY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
TRAFFIC CONGESTION
SERVICE DELIVERY
TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT
URBAN PLANNING
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
URBAN TRANSPORT
URBAN POVERTY
RAPID TRANSIT
WORLD BANK STRATEGY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
TRAFFIC CONGESTION
SERVICE DELIVERY
TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT
URBAN PLANNING
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
spellingShingle PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
URBAN TRANSPORT
URBAN POVERTY
RAPID TRANSIT
WORLD BANK STRATEGY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
TRAFFIC CONGESTION
SERVICE DELIVERY
TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT
URBAN PLANNING
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
URBAN TRANSPORT
URBAN POVERTY
RAPID TRANSIT
WORLD BANK STRATEGY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
TRAFFIC CONGESTION
SERVICE DELIVERY
TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT
URBAN PLANNING
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
Mitric, Slobodan
World Bank’s Engagement with Transport in Cities : The Early Years
description This study looks at the project practice in light of the strategy as declared in the sector paper. The main focus is on the first decade of the urban transport lending program (1972–82). By and large, this batch of projects adhered to the strategy, except there was little effort to engage with land use planning. Project investments included roads in slum areas, improvements of radial corridors and central area road networks, fleet and facilities for city- and state-owned public transport operators, and select investments in major road and urban rail projects. On the policy side, projects strove to improve cost recovery of public-owned transport operators, facilitate the private provision of public transport services, designate street space for exclusive use of buses, and introduce congestion charges. In the institutional dimension, projects assisted in setting up traffic management units and some form of metropolitan transport planning entities. Investment outcomes varied. Some projects were highly successful, notably the two projects in Brazil that focused on roads in slums and bus priority. Others were highly disappointing, as in Tehran, where the government went into major road building rather than pursue traffic management and public transport improvements championed by the project. Project policy initiatives produced mixed results with less than complete achievement of cost recovery in public transport services and a failure to introduce congestion charges. Improved regulation of privately provided public transport had several bright spots (e.g., Kuala Lumpur, Calcutta), but also persistent failures (e.g., Kingston). Efforts to set up traffic management units in the city government gave some very good results (e.g., Tunis), but the creation and nurture of metropolitan transport planning institutions turned out to be far more difficult. Overall, these pioneering efforts in both strategy and practice were well conceived and executed and played a catalytic role in most client cities. Weak aspects include overselling traffic management as a substitute (rather than a complement) to road investments, together with failing to evolve a constructive approach to urban road network development in rapidly growing cities. There were no attempts to tackle urban road funding as a part of the national road funding setup. Instead, over-optimistically, several projects attempted to introduce sophisticated price instruments such as congestion charging, which proved a long shot in the weak policy and institutional environments found in many client cities.
format Report
topic_facet PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
URBAN TRANSPORT
URBAN POVERTY
RAPID TRANSIT
WORLD BANK STRATEGY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
TRAFFIC CONGESTION
SERVICE DELIVERY
TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT
URBAN PLANNING
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
author Mitric, Slobodan
author_facet Mitric, Slobodan
author_sort Mitric, Slobodan
title World Bank’s Engagement with Transport in Cities : The Early Years
title_short World Bank’s Engagement with Transport in Cities : The Early Years
title_full World Bank’s Engagement with Transport in Cities : The Early Years
title_fullStr World Bank’s Engagement with Transport in Cities : The Early Years
title_full_unstemmed World Bank’s Engagement with Transport in Cities : The Early Years
title_sort world bank’s engagement with transport in cities : the early years
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018-07
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/235751532573412101/World-Bank-s-engagement-With-transport-in-cities-the-early-years
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30415
work_keys_str_mv AT mitricslobodan worldbanksengagementwithtransportincitiestheearlyyears
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