By Jonah Goldberg
Tuesday, February 14, 2018
It’s Infrastructure Week (again), and who among us can
contain his excitement?
The president, for one.
According to reports, President Trump wanted to announce
the biggest investment in public works since President Eisenhower unveiled the
interstate highway system. But in the wake of tax cuts, the real deficit was
too big to close what Trump calls “the infrastructure deficit.” So he had to
settle for a plan that would spend $200 billion in federal taxpayer money over
the next decade and lay the rest of the $1.5 trillion on state and local
taxpayers.
It almost surely won’t fly. Many states are as broke as
the federal government — and they can’t print money.
In his big-building, big-spending ambitions, Trump is at
his most conventional. Politicians, as transportation expert Randal O’Toole
puts it, have a deep-seated bias in favor of “ribbon-cutting over brooms.” They
just love wielding a giant pair of scissors to cut a shiny ribbon on a new
project. You can put your name on a new tunnel or bridge. It’s harder to take
credit for fixing an existing one.
Even Trump’s insistence that our infrastructure is
“crumbling” is among the most enduring clichés of American politics. A search
of LexisNexis shows that America’s infrastructure has been crumbling since the
late 1970s. And it’s simply not true. The most recent data is from 2012, when
President Obama was insisting that our infrastructure was crumbling. At that
time, 80 percent of our highways were in acceptable shape or better. Nearly 97
percent of rural roads met that grade.
Bridge failures in Washington state in 2013 and Minnesota
in 2007 were greeted as symbolic proof of systemic disrepair. But the
Washington state bridge collapsed because a truck driver carrying an oversized
load ignored posted warnings. It would have collapsed if it had been brand-new.
And the Minnesota collapse was the result of a construction defect.
Meanwhile, the conditions of our bridges have been
improving consistently for the last two decades.
Of course some American infrastructure could use
updating. The problem, however, isn’t underinvestment. In 2014, according to
the Congressional Budget Office, federal, state, and local governments spent
$416 billion on infrastructure.
The real problem is that we don’t spend money on the
right problems.
A recent exposé by the New York Times showed that politicians and the unions that own them
are to blame for the Big Apple’s deteriorating subway system. For years they’ve
raided transportation funds for pet projects, like failing upstate ski resorts.
Beyond New York, a perfect storm of ribbon-cutting
fetishizing, environmentalism, and envy of other countries has led to
high-speed-rail mania. Although zippy trains are nifty, they zoom past the fact
America has the best rail system — for our needs. In Europe, trucks move goods
and trains move people. In America, we do it the other way around.
Trump’s proposal does include a few worthwhile ambitions,
such as streamlining the approval process for public works and improving
incentives to come in under budget.
After the 1994 Northridge earthquake, then-California
governor Pete Wilson used his emergency powers to bypass the usual red tape and
unionized extortion that drive up costs and string out construction time.
Experts thought it would take two years to fix the Santa Monica Freeway. Wilson
offered contractors huge cash bonuses to meet tight deadlines. The repairs were
completed in less than three months.
The Trump plan, however, would leave it to Congress to
figure out how to de-boondoggle-ize infrastructure projects, which is not a
cause for optimism.
Trump sees infrastructure investment pretty much the same
way Democrats do — as a jobs program. That doesn’t work either (see: Japan).
But if Trump had begun his presidency with building as his top priority, he
would have won a lot of bipartisan support and turned the GOP into a
big-government party much sooner.
Alas — or, depending on your point of view, lucky break —
he spent his capital, political and fiscal, elsewhere. And now there’s none
left for the riot of ribbon-cutting he wanted.
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