The American Rail System isn't Broken and Doesn't Need Obama's Billions

Yesterday, I highlighted a story were liberals in California are angry over the high-speed rail plans of Obamas. I am sure you can guess the reasons. As well, liberals in the Peoples' Republic of Madison, Wisconsin are upset by the plans because the proposals require the rails to be enclosed by a fence and many are worried about the unsightly fence as well as the lack of access it will cause to stores. It's always fun when liberals get in the way of Obama's silly plans.

Let's look at the common sense conservative side of the argument against high-speed rail. Obama is ready to invest billions in this system, but the problem is the American rail system works just fine. It's not broken, and yet Obama says it needs fixin'. You know the old cliche. Government is the worst about trying to fix things that aren't broken.

This from National Review:

One of the favorite clichés of the rail-transit-mongers is that Europe shows that high-speed rail can be a success. This ignores some essential facts, such as Europe’s higher population density and smaller geography.

Interestingly, there is one U.S.–Europe comparison that they never make: The U.S. hugely outpaces Europe in one key area of rail transport, but it’s freight rather than people. This report from the European Commission (table 5.1, page 68) tells the story. Measured in ton-kilometers (i.e., one ton shipped one kilometer), the U.S. ships more than six times the amount of freight as the European Union. Freight rail in the U.S. accounts for 43 percent of total ton-kilometers shipped by all transportation sources, versus only 16.7 percent in the E.U., where they ship much more by truck, due in part to the shorter distances goods have to travel.

In both cases, the freight choices are driven by markets and geography. In other words, freight rail accounts for so much more of our modal share for the same reasons more passenger rail makes no sense. When markets rather than bureaucrats and subsidies determine the outcome, rail does just fine in the U.S.