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The infrastructure myth
The Lagniappe Weekly ^ | June 21, 2017 | Jeff Poor

Posted on 06/21/2017 9:49:28 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Throughout the 2016 campaign and into the early stages of his presidency, Donald Trump vowed to make infrastructure improvements around the country.

The promise was all part of his brand of populism — spend more money domestically and less abroad. America first.

“We need members of both parties to join hands and work with us to pass a $1 trillion infrastructure plan to build new roads and bridges and airports and tunnels and highways and railways all across our great nation,” Trump pledged at a campaign rally in Melbourne, Florida, earlier this year.

Given Trump’s Russia investigation toxicity, it will be very tough for a $1 trillion infrastructure package to make it through Congress, at least in the near term. The most conservative members of the Republican caucus likely will not go along with it.

Trump would need a sizable proportion of the Democratic members of Congress to join pro-infrastructure-spending Republicans.

For the sake of argument, let’s assume eventually Trump and the GOP leadership can muster the necessary votes to get $1 trillion in infrastructure spending signed into law.

Let’s take a step further and say — with Sen. Richard Shelby in the Senate and an Alabama delegation in the House rising in seniority — some of this funding makes it to the Yellowhammer State to fund a laundry list of highway projects.

In 2016, a Washington, D.C.-based private nonprofit organization called TRIP compiled a wishlist of Alabama highway projects that it claimed would improve “growth and quality of life.” Among the Mobile-area projects were improvements to Interstate 10 across Mobile Bay, widening U.S. 98 and I-10 from Mobile to the Mississippi state line and more lanes in Baldwin County for I-10. There were others around the state — a freeway bypass in Montgomery, widening the perpetually clogged I-65 in Shelby County and improvements to Ross Clark Circle in Dothan.

All of those proposals are worthy of consideration. Over the last 30 years, Alabama’s metropolitan areas have grown, but the thoroughfares in those areas have been woefully unprepared for that growth.

Will highway projects like these spark new economic growth for Alabama? Not necessarily.

Consider Mississippi as a limited case study.

When you leave Alabama going into Mississippi on any of the major highways leaving Mobile — U.S. 98 headed toward Hattiesburg or U.S. 45 headed toward Meridian — the road magically widens from a treacherous, curvy Alabama two-lane road to a straight four-lane Mississippi highway — often with hardly a vehicle in sight.

The reasons for this disparity can be found in Washington, D.C. The Mississippi congressional delegation over the years has been very successful steering federal funds to its state. For a period, Republican Trent Lott was the majority leader of the Senate. Sen. Thad Cochran is the third-longest serving U.S. senator (a Republican in office since 1978), behind Sens. Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) and Orrin Hatch (R-Utah).

In the years following the construction of the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway — a waterway that connects the Tennessee River to the Tombigbee River, empties into the Mobile River and exits into Mobile Bay — Mississippi started putting an emphasis on improving its highways.

You can crisscross the state of Mississippi without having to navigate a congested two-lane road for the most part. If you want to drive from Natchez to Corinth, Pascagoula to the Memphis suburbs, Jackson to Tupelo or Columbus to Greenville, the trip can be multi-lane all the way.

As many well know, that is not the case in Alabama. The quickest way from Mobile to Dothan consists mostly of driving through the Florida Panhandle. Trying to get from Mobile to Tuscaloosa for an Alabama football game? Prepare for a mostly rural two-lane trek through the state’s Black Belt region. Mobile to Huntsville? Yes, I-65 is a four-lane interstate the entire way but was built going 50 miles out of the way so it would go through Montgomery.

Navigating Alabama is arguably more difficult than our neighbor to the west. But that does not mean Mississippi is prospering compared to Alabama.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, as of May 11 Alabama’s gross domestic product, the total value of goods produced and services provided in the state over one year, was nearly $200 billion. That put the state at No. 27 among all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Farther down the list at $106 billion was Mississippi, at No. 36.

Despite all these infrastructure improvements in Mississippi, Alabama over the last five years has continued to outpace the Magnolia State economically.

Conventional wisdom suggests infrastructure is the name of the game for growing the economy. All over the country, the more liberal and progressive precincts tout high-speed rail.

There is much more required for economic growth than getting people, goods and services transported more efficiently. Education, natural resources, public safety — those are all parts of the equation as well.

Certainly, one can make the argument that getting home from Mobile to the peaceful suburbs of the Eastern Shore will increase productivity slightly. That, however, is hardly a significant enough economic gain to justify pushing a $1 trillion spending bill, the bulk of which the federal government probably will borrow.

It may make recruiting industry a little easier, but the state can create incentives more cost effectively through its tax code. Alabama, to its credit, has done just that to lure auto manufacturing to the state.

Once you get those companies to the state, you expand the tax base, which ultimately means more revenue for the government. And then it’s more feasible to take on infrastructure improvement.

In the meantime, it is important to keep in mind that if you build, it doesn’t necessarily mean they will come.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections; US: Alabama; US: Mississippi
KEYWORDS: alabama; economy; feds; gdp; growth; infrastructure; mississippi; spending; states; transportation; trump

1 posted on 06/21/2017 9:49:29 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

This person should take a trip on I 40 through Flagstaff AZ west.


2 posted on 06/21/2017 9:57:42 PM PDT by crz
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Is this from that alt-left paper in Mobile?


3 posted on 06/21/2017 10:01:01 PM PDT by Bodleian_Girl (Don't check the news, check Cernovich on Twitter)
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To: crz
This person should take a trip on I 40 through Flagstaff AZ west.

I was just down that highway over Christmas, and I agree. The highway is a mess and in some places dangerous at highway speeds.

4 posted on 06/21/2017 10:01:34 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
An Alabama Highway Patrolman, a distant friend of a relative in Birmingham, told me that too much money was being funneled into the Alabama economy by writing tickets on most of those 2 lane roads coming into Alabama.
The Governor, way back then, had said that local economies profit from out-of-state people stopping to get fuel, and food, and even to pay tickets in those one-horse towns, and unless he absolutely had to, he would NOT make them 4 lane byways until he was forced to do so.
But that was back in the early 90s.
5 posted on 06/21/2017 10:06:12 PM PDT by Yosemitest (It's SIMPLE ! ... Fight, ... or Die !)
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To: Vince Ferrer

An average of two semi truck accidents a week caused by that road. Steer tires blowing as a result of pot holes. Thats just between Ash Fork and Flag.


6 posted on 06/21/2017 10:21:04 PM PDT by crz
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

This person should drive in NYC. They’d need a moon buggy to safely negotiate all the potholes and ruined pavement. It’s so bad, you can’t even do the speed limit on many major thoroughfares. And, better bring your own flashlight, because a whole lotta street lights are burned out and never replaced for years. Oh, and I hope he’s a good approximater of where he thinks the lanes should be, because a lot of important roads and highways have NO lane markings, they having been worn off long ago and never repainted. But DeBlasio always seems to have tons of money for his ghetto thug darlings and illegals.


7 posted on 06/21/2017 11:14:15 PM PDT by EinNYC
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

>infrastructure myth

You need good quality general infrastructure for efficient internal trade. We’ve been letting ours degrade for years while spending the bank on so called green tech and social justice causes.


8 posted on 06/21/2017 11:26:10 PM PDT by JohnyBoy
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To: EinNYC

That sounds like 16th Street in Silver Spring, MD


9 posted on 06/21/2017 11:57:29 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (April 2006 Message from Dan http://www.dansimmons.com/news/message/2006_04.htm)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Amen for this writer stating the obvious! Congress spends spends spends and spends. And then when they don’t have the money to spend they do what? Spend some more. “Infrastructure” spending should be spent with the money we have not the money we imagine, not the money that is realized by cutting here and plugging into some model that states if this then that but REAL HARD DOLLARS. Until that happens I don’t want to hear about another liberal gibsmedat spending spree with conservatives proudly cheering on the 3rd generation removed under further mountains of debt.

We CANNOT sustain this continual spending spree


10 posted on 06/22/2017 2:39:45 AM PDT by Jarhead9297
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To: crz

This person should take a trip on I 40 through Flagstaff AZ west.

Yeah. Why can’t John McCain do something useful and fix I-40. If he spent half as much time bringing some federal funds from the gasoline tax back to Arizona, as he does getting himself on TV to moan about Trump, maybe he could fix the potholes in I-40 and serve the people who elected him.


11 posted on 06/22/2017 4:23:46 AM PDT by Cheesehead In Dubai (used to be Cheesehead in Texas, but I moved)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

The biggest reason the Rats wont vote to give Trump a Trillion dollars? They know what they did with the Trillions the feckless GOP gave them...


12 posted on 06/22/2017 4:26:55 AM PDT by wastoute (Government cannot redistribute wealth. Government can only redistribute poverty.)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

“Infrastructure” screams two things to me—crony capitalism and an excuse for higher taxes or fees for stuff that should be covered for what we’re already paying.

It is no accident that the CEO of Goldman (who managed to move his longtime #2 in as Trump’s Chief Economic Adviser) is pushing infrastructure—that coerced, big-government spending is central to their business model.


13 posted on 06/22/2017 4:32:56 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: Yosemitest

Heard this in Nebraska years ago. That is why so many towns fought bypasses.


14 posted on 06/22/2017 5:20:04 AM PDT by redgolum
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To: redgolum
A lot of Mississippi little towns moved their "City Limit" to incorporate the bypass, so as to be able to write tickets on them.
They also built new community hospitals and local schools on their right of ways, just to lower the speed limits in those areas,
and they're constantly doing "Maintenance" in those areas, so as to double the fees on those speeding tickets.
15 posted on 06/22/2017 5:41:57 AM PDT by Yosemitest (It's SIMPLE ! ... Fight, ... or Die !)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

What would help more than anything is to put less strain on our infrastructure. Deport every last illegal and stop the invaders.


16 posted on 06/22/2017 5:53:30 AM PDT by bgill (CDC site, "We don't know how people are infected with Ebola.")
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Bump


17 posted on 06/22/2017 8:09:06 PM PDT by foreverfree
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