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wuchan wrote:The highway should be free in most places. There should be tolls in places where there are large volumes of traffic like the 23 wards and large bridges.
FG Lurker wrote:I can't wait until they get rid of the "1000yen weekends and holidays thing" and go back to normal tolls. What the hell is the point of having expressways if they move at 10km/hr!?
FG Lurker wrote::rofl: What planet are you from?
Free? There is no such thing as free. Highways are insanely expensive to build and maintain. Either the users of the highway pay with tolls or EVERYONE pays through higher taxes.
No tolls means more highway use which in turn means more maintenance, further increasing costs. Since there are no tolls to offset those costs that means higher taxes yet again. Great idea!
wuchan wrote:Maybe if the city hall didn't have 3,000,000 people sitting around doing nothing..................
pheyton wrote:What? You mean all this time in California the freeways were supposed to move faster than 10kmph?
Behan wrote:With all the lanes they have on LA highways it's amazing they still get huge traffic jams.
pheyton wrote:What? You mean all this time in California the freeways were supposed to move faster than 10kmph?
wuchan wrote:Maybe if the city hall didn't have 3,000,000 people sitting around doing nothing..................
FG Lurker wrote:Ridiculous argument. The useless civil servants need to go and savings found everywhere possible but that money shouldn't then be wasted making something free (expressways) that should be mostly self-supporting.
With an aging population and a national debt rapidly approaching 200% of GDP Japan is already heading towards a 20% sales tax and much higher income/payroll taxes. How much worse do you want to make it?
pheyton wrote:Japan definitely needs to start raising taxes incrementally each year. A quarter point maybe, both on income and sales. That money should go straight to reigning in the national debt.
hundefar wrote:Where will all the money that is needed to pay for DPJ's mad election promises come from?
Greji wrote:Give the consumer his money back so he can use it, not taking it away from him..
Securing new revenue sources to cover the 31 trillion yen in debts owed by expressway companies and road maintenance costs will be the biggest issue in the Democratic Party of Japan's plan to end expressway tolls.
[...]
Eliminating the tolls is expected to cause serious traffic jams, especially in large urban areas, including on the Metropolitan and Hanshin expressways. The plan likely will be initially implemented on lightly trafficked routes in rural areas.
Even so, securing revenue sources will remain the biggest problem.
[...]
Under the DPJ plan, the debts now shouldered by the agency would be transferred to the government, which would retire the debts in 60 years via annual payments of 1.3 trillion yen in principal and interest, respectively.
(Full Story)
The Democratic Party of Japan's main preelection pledge to make expressways toll-free is attracting considerable attention ahead of the launch of the new DPJ-led administration.
Though the party insists the measure will revitalize regional economies by lowering distribution costs, train and bus service companies are opposing the move, saying their ridership will sharply decrease.
[...]
"Many bus passengers are elderly or in a weak position in terms of road use," Takeshima said. "If more bus routes disappear, regional communities will be damaged. The DPJ doesn't understand the effect [this would have]."
[...]
Also in the region, the up-to 1,000 yen expressway toll prices caused ferry companies' transport volume to fall by 10 percent to 30 percent, especially at companies with routes that rival the road routes that run via the three bridges that connect Honshu and Shikoku.
As a result, three ferry companies in the Chugoku region were forced to suspend their businesses.
[...]
The DPJ has said the purpose of making expressways toll-free is to lower distribution costs and prices of goods, while revitalizing local communities and regional economies.
But some business owners say if expressways start being used every day, traffic among local communities will increase, truck delivery costs will fall, and it will be easier for local products to get to larger consumption areas.
A marine products wholesalers' association in Tokyo said, "More and more fish will be brought to Tokyo markets from distant parts of the nation."
[...]
According to the government's household census, each household spent an average of 8,923 yen on toll roads in 2008.
The DPJ estimates it would take 1.3 trillion yen [PER YEAR!] to make all expressways toll-free. This is equivalent to a more than 10,000 yen [PER YEAR!] per capita burden on taxpayers.
(Full Story)
canman wrote:But Lurker I think a lot of this is Chicken Little.
canman wrote:You are right that there is huge debt, but where did it come from. Once the bureaucracy was in place, they had to continue to build roads that weren't wanted or needed.
IkemenTommy wrote:I say they make the expressway all free. Fuck that. I'll take the gara gara shinkansen and the kokunaisens while all you fucks suffer!!!:twisted:
FG Lurker wrote:If things get that empty then it will create more transportation systems that need government support to stay running.
None of this is "free" and although I can't speak for anyone else I certainly don't desire even higher income taxes and a 20% consumption tax.
FG Lurker wrote:Fine, then kill off the highway corp, re-nationalize the highways (fucked up to have privatized highways anyway IMO) and keep the tolls to pay off the current debt.
dimwit wrote:The problem with that is that the tolls were so high in Shikoku that no one actually used the expressways and they weren't even paying there operating costs. The 1000 yen ETC actually brought in considerably more income while not increasing costs.
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