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  • G'day, mate, and welcome to the autopista de peaje de Indiana

    Sometimes I find globalization disorienting. Not good, not bad, just...disorienting.

    Lost Highway
    The foolish plan to sell American toll roads to foreign companies.
    By Daniel Gross
    Posted Wednesday, March 29, 2006, at 4:56 PM ET

    If a governor told you there were a way to spread pork, raise funds for infrastructure investment, promote jobs, avoid raising taxes, and put a dent in the trade deficit—all in one fell swoop—you might think he had a bridge to sell you. And you'd be right. Only in this case, it's a toll road. And instead of a sale, how about a long-term lease?

    Earlier this month, in a triumph for Gov. Mitch Daniels, Indiana's House narrowly approved his proposal to lease the 157-mile Indiana Toll Road, which spans the northern part of the state, for $3.85 billion to a joint venture of Cintra, a Spanish company, and Australia's Macquarie Bank. The two companies have been active in the U.S. road business. In 2004, the two inked a 99-year lease for the 7.8-mile elevated Chicago Skyway. Last year, Macquarie completed its acquisition of the Dulles Greenway outside Washington, D.C. And Cintra, which manages toll roads in Europe and the Americas, is a strategic partner to the Texas state government in the planned Trans-Texas Corridor. There are likely more such deals to come.

    For Daniels—who failed to live up to his nickname ("The Blade") when he served as director of the Office of Management and Budget in the first Bush administration—the 75-year lease is an elegant solution. The state needs billions of dollars to invest in new roads. Getting the cash upfront will allow Daniels to speed up construction on needed infrastructure projects, create new jobs, and fund his Clintonian Major Moves initiative. (Here's a list of projects to be funded and a fact sheet on the deal.) And by raising the cash from foreigners, he's doing his part to rein in the pernicious current-account deficit. "Too often in Indiana, we see Hoosier dollars and jobs leaving the state. Major Moves is an exciting opportunity to recapture U.S. dollars by attracting foreign investment, and use them to create jobs for Hoosiers," he said.

    What's in it for the foreign companies? Huge potential profits. Gigantic, steady profits. Toll roads are an incredible asset class. They're often monopolies. They can support debt, since they provide a recurring guaranteed revenue stream that is likely to rise over time, as more people take to the roads and tolls increase. According to Cintra, the Indiana Toll Road generated $96 million in revenues in 2005, and Cintra expects a 12.5 percent internal rate of return on its investment. The heavy lifting has already been done: The state or federal governments have acquired the land and rights of way, built the roads and maintained them for years, and enacted toll increases. All the private companies have to do is deliver cash upfront, maintain the roads, and collect the windfall. The buyers can also increase their profits by making toll roads run more efficiently with technology. After assuming control of the Chicago Skyway, the Cintra-Macquarie consortium installed electronic toll equipment on some lanes. And by refinancing nimbly, companies can cash out. Last year—just seven months into its 99-year lease—Cintra announced that it had recovered 44 percent of its initial investment in the Chicago road through refinancing.

    (So, why aren't American companies buying up our toll roads? Here's a theory.)

    This easy money for foreigners makes the locals uneasy. In mid-March, the Indiana House approved the deal by a surprisingly slim margin. The Indiana scheme continues to engender local opposition. Last week, while participating in a panel discussion in South Bend, Ind., I got the sense that the toll lease made Hoosiers uneasy for reasons they couldn't quite articulate. It's not like the buyers could uproot the concrete and move it to Queensland, Australia, or Seville, Spain. The 400-page contract spells out in detail obligations of the consortium to invest in maintenance and safety and to keep a lid on toll rates. And unlike the Dubai ports case, it's hard to see how management of the toll road by a foreign entity could raise security threats.

    I think the uneasiness has more to do with what it says about the peculiar fiscal climate in the United States. How is it that in the richest nation on the earth, localities simply don't have the cash to do necessary maintenance on basic infrastructure, the political will to raise such funds, or the competence to run such easily profitable operations? Why are they being forced to sell off long-term cash cows for short-term cash?

    Leasing or selling a public asset is a classic one-shot—a short-term measure that bolsters the balance sheet today but that can't be repeated. While politicians like Daniels focus on getting through the next few fiscal years with minimum pain, foreign companies are thinking about how to get rich off of tolls for the next three-quarters of a century. From Gov. Daniels to his former boss, President Bush, there's a troubling unwillingness to align governmental resources with the express goals and responsibilities of government. At the federal level, we rely on China's central bank to buy our bonds and fund basic operations. As a result, our tax revenues wind up in Beijing—as interest payments. At the state level, Indiana is relying on foreign companies to lease public infrastructure like toll roads. And under these arrangements, tolls—taxes people pay for driving—are being paid to foreign shareholders of foreign companies.

    Of course, by selling public infrastructure at high prices, state governments could be taking foreigners for a ride. The Japanese famously overpaid for Rockefeller Center, after all. It's possible that Indiana just ripped off the Spaniards and Aussies. But I doubt it.
    If a governor told you there were a way to spread pork, raise funds for infrastructure investment, promote jobs, avoid raising taxes, and put a dent in...


    Discuss!
    "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

  • #2
    Bizarre? Will that suffice?
    Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
    "Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
    He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead

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    • #3
      Sure. But I forgot to mention my favorite thing about this proposal. Right now, the rest stops on the Indiana Toll Road are all named after famous Hoosiers, like Knute Rockney, James Whitcomb Riley, and Booth Tarkington (the last one being wonderfully ironic, since Tarkington considered the automobile a device that would destroy civilization). Anyway, I want to know if the Aussies and Spanish get rest stop naming rights as part of the deal; personally, next time I drive from Pittsburgh to Chicago, I'd be delighted to pull over and take a leak at the Kylie Minogue Rest Area, somewhere just outside Elkhart.
      "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

      Comment


      • #4
        Heh, somebody else reads Slate, I see.

        Anyway... odd, but I'm not sure it's in any way bad.

        -Arrian
        grog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!

        The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.

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        • #5


          Soon we will own all of America's roads

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          • #6
            Nazi
            Monkey!!!

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            • #7
              Looks more like Ceasar to me.
              Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

              Comment


              • #8
                I forsee the Spanish company buying chains of highways linking the US-Mexican border to the West, Northeast, Midwest, and South and then providing a protected invasion route for their south of the border co-linguists. Soon Hispaincs will become a majority in the US and thus the Spanish-American War will be avenged. It is our folly to believe that they have forgotten about their turn of the century humiliation. We must do something now before it's too late.
                "I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!

                Comment


                • #9
                  The real crux of the matter is the lack of fiscal discipline at all levels of government in the US. If the State of Indiana could guarantee the up front money would be handled prudently, then there is no problem with the deal. However, if the State of Indiana had been fiscally prudent in the past, it would not have needed to lease out the toll roads in the first place.
                  “It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”

                  ― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by pchang
                    The real crux of the matter is the lack of fiscal discipline at all levels of government in the US. If the State of Indiana could guarantee the up front money would be handled prudently, then there is no problem with the deal. However, if the State of Indiana had been fiscally prudent in the past, it would not have needed to lease out the toll roads in the first place.
                    It's also a lack of political will. Indiana says it's making the deal because it needs the cash to fix its roads. Once upon a time, states would raise taxes when money was needed. Now, taxes have been given such a dirty name that the state would rather lease its own infrastructure to a foreign company, and forego a steady and rising revenue stream for 75 years, rather than whisper the "T" word.

                    (In fairness, states also finance these kinds of things through bond initiatives, and I don't know why Indiana isn't going that route; paying out 6% on a bond is surely better than losing the 12.5% projected return on the toll road investment. Go figure.)
                    "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

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                    • #11
                      from an Indiana resident-

                      I loathe Daniels and schemes like this.

                      Its been really a crazy year for us, this weekend we make the leap to daylight savings....

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by asleepathewheel
                        Its been really a crazy year for us, this weekend we make the leap to daylight savings....
                        Which, if memory serves, is a local-option, county-by-county thing, right? Man, I hated driving throgh Indiana in the summer. It's 9:00; an hour later, it's 11:00; an hour later, it's still 11:00.

                        Of course, now that the Spanish are buying your state up piece by piece, the need for accurate timekeeping will be irrelevant.

                        "Reminder: as of 2 am Sunday, Hoosiers should set all their clock to 'manana'."
                        "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

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