Posted on 08/06/2013 2:29:30 PM PDT by neverdem
Entrepreneurs built our roads, rails and canals far better than government did.
For almost five years now, President Obama has been making the argument that government "investments" in infrastructure are crucial to economic recovery. "Now we used to have the best infrastructure in the world here in America," the president lamented in 2011. "So how can we now sit back and let China build the best railroads? And let Europe build the best highways? And have Singapore build a nicer airport?"
In his recent economic speeches in Illinois, Missouri, Florida and Tennessee, the president again made a pitch for government spending for transportation and "putting people back to work rebuilding America's infrastructure." Create the infrastructure, in other words, and the jobs will come.
History says it doesn't work like that. Henry Ford and dozens of other auto makers put a car in almost every garage decades before the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act in 1956. The success of the car created a demand for roads. The government didn't build highways, and then Ford decided to create the Model T. Instead, the highways came as a byproduct of the entrepreneurial genius of Ford and others.
Moreover, the makers of autos, tires and headlights began building roads privately long before any state or the federal government got involved. The Lincoln Highway, the first transcontinental highway for cars, pieced together from new and existing roads in 1913, was conceived and partly built by entrepreneursHenry Joy of Packard Motor Car Co., Frank Seiberling of Goodyear and Carl Fisher, a maker of headlights and founder of the Indy 500.
Railroads are another example of the infrastructure-follows-entrepreneurship rule. Before the 1860s, almost all railroads were privately financed and built. One exception was in Michigan, where the state tried to build two railroads but lost money...
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
Bump!
Good job, Larry.
Are there any public transportation schemes in America that actually make more money than they are subsidized?
“Public investment” is a term that is retarted sir
Besides roads, if that, I cannot think of a single thing that government can do better than the private sector.
I totally agree with the articles premise
A great editorial. Filled with pesky facts sure to irritate Bambots...
Thanks for posting, neverdem. HOORAY Larry!
bttt
A great editorial. Filled with pesky facts sure to irritate Bambots...
I second that. Marxists always have an extremely difficult time with causes and effects.
Bravo!
I live in a bumper community in the Houston area.. My town, Sugar Land, Fort Bend County, sits on the boarder of Houston,Harris County.. The dividing line is a highway that serves as the community boundary line..
The road work that happens on each line tells the entire story of Liberal vs Conservative policies.. Houston and Harris is totally Democrat and union controlled, and Sugar Land, Fort Bend, is completely Republican, and nonunion..
Whenever there is road improvement on the Houston side, it takes years, the polar opposite of our side, they work around the clock, because the contract is monitored by a COMPLETION AGREEMENT, meaning the work isn’t funded until the work and progress meets a construction standard which is pre-agreed upon..
Not only are we using the finished project earlier, but the costs are completely different, I need not tell you which costs are a joke, and which are fair..
The canals, most of them, made about 4%. Don’t know if you want to call them “subsidized,” but they had state bond guarantees.
I remember something about the aftermath of the San Fran earthquake... one highway was rebuilt differently. The contractor was to be paid more the sooner it was rebuilt.
It was done in record time.
later
Today, we have the technology to do so (if you don't pay your bill, a scanner would shut your car off), but that would result in lawsuits and would not be practical in today's legal climate.
If they didn’t use the road, then they shouldn’t pay. You should not be able to force people to use your road instead of walking through the woods (by definition not your road)
In the age of the railroad there were 3 competing to be the first to become an intercontinental rail. 2 of them used government subsidies and grants and the power to take land, one of them did not. The northernmost.
It was still profitable until the government began passing laws favorable to the other two. While the other two tried to build a more direct and straight across line across the country, the northernmost of them built local spurs and lines to cities and towns where railways were needed most. This gave them revenue to use building more rail, although it meandered more than the subsidized lines.
Until I read your reply, I didn’t remember that, but it happens every day down here.. It’s remarkable, everyone sees it and comments about it, but don’t do much to change anything except vote the same idiots back, including Shella Jackson Lee.. go figger.. :)
That has a name, Shunpiking. It also has a website.
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