Jesse Simmons
The Bicycle Dividend
As New York City began rolling out
extensive bike lanes this Spring, John Cassidy of The New Yorker raised staunch
opposition, suggesting that the point has been reached where the additional
costs of bike lanes to motorists and pedestrians are greater than the benefits
they provide to cyclists. The Economist promptly published an article
addressing the economic fallacies of Cassidy’s crusade, delineating the
dramatic externalities of urban auto use, including respiratory damage from
auto-generated ozone, climate changing carbon dioxide, road breakdown, and
congestion, not to mention accident fatalities and obesity. As fuel taxes are
too low to cover road maintenance, let alone the rest of these externalities,
none of which bicycles exhibit, New York would be better off encouraging fewer
cars and more bicycles, The Economist argues.
Nancy
Folbre, of UMASS Amherst, takes her economic analysis a step further, positing
a concept of “The Bicycle Dividend.” She turns the traditional economic concept
of demand stimulating supply on its head, showing that increased supply of bike
lanes encourages more cyclists, which makes cycling safer, which in turn
attracts more cyclists, which begins to shift cultural perspectives on cycling,
which in turn attracts more cyclists, which encourages businesses to offer
showers and other resources for their bike-commuting employees, which in turn
attracts more cyclists, etc. This virtuous cycle, while taking time to evolve,
can be spurred by increased supply of bike infrastructure. Finally, she quotes
a study by her colleague showing that each dollar spent on bike paths creates more jobs than each dollar spent on roads, in addition to
providing more public welfare.
Discouragingly,
Armin Rosen of Alt Transport published a reaction to Folbre’s article arguing
that drivers won’t necessarily stop driving because bike lanes have increased.
Rosen concludes,
“There is a biking dividend, but it might have more to do with a city’s prestige and reputation, as well as its local biking economy, than with any unproven ability to take cars off the road.” This reveals Rosen’s greatest blunder, as he fails to recognize the connectedness of a city’s reputation, biking economy, and car concentration. As Folbre’s virtuous cycle illustrates, the three build off each other, so if a city would benefit from fewer cars, as The Economist suggests New York would, then
it would do well to invest in bike infrastructure. This in turn will increase bike commuters, resources for bike commuters, and begin to change pervasive cultural attitudes towards bikes. Further, NICHES’ recent survey showed 7% of people who use Lyon’s Velo’v bike-share would have driven a car if the program did not exist, showing that enhanced infrastructure does take cars off the road. (Buhrmann, 2009)
“There is a biking dividend, but it might have more to do with a city’s prestige and reputation, as well as its local biking economy, than with any unproven ability to take cars off the road.” This reveals Rosen’s greatest blunder, as he fails to recognize the connectedness of a city’s reputation, biking economy, and car concentration. As Folbre’s virtuous cycle illustrates, the three build off each other, so if a city would benefit from fewer cars, as The Economist suggests New York would, then
it would do well to invest in bike infrastructure. This in turn will increase bike commuters, resources for bike commuters, and begin to change pervasive cultural attitudes towards bikes. Further, NICHES’ recent survey showed 7% of people who use Lyon’s Velo’v bike-share would have driven a car if the program did not exist, showing that enhanced infrastructure does take cars off the road. (Buhrmann, 2009)
This
issue lies at the crux of city planning, and Cassidy’s accusation of “the bike
lobby’s effort to poach on our territory” lays bare his belief that the
streets, the majority of most cities’ public space, belongs to drivers, and any
reconfiguration of this historical precedent is an affront to their rights.
Fortunately, we are now afforded the hindsight to see that basing our
transportation system on cars is hurting our bodies and our environment, in
more ways that one. After all, here we aren’t just talking about public
transportation, but what kind of transportation we, as a public, wish to
incentivize. It’s time for our leaders to make public space work for our best
interests as a public, not just for the best interests of drivers. The dramatic
proliferation of bike sharing programs across the world reveal a change of
course, and the expansion of public space afforded to cyclists will only facilitate
the social and infrastructural change necessary to make cycling a viable urban
transportation option, and make our cities better places to live.
·
This article was featured
by Urbanism News, Streetsblog Network, and The Bike-sharing Blog
Sources
Buhrmann, S. (2009). New
Seamless Mobility Services: Public Bicycles, NICHES.
The Economist (2011)
Tragedies of the Commons: The world is his parking spot. The Economist
Folbre, N. (2011). The
Bicycle Dividend Economix. T. N. Y. Times.
Rosen, A. (2011).
"Biking Our Way Out of Economic Uncertainty." Alt Transport.
No comments:
Post a Comment