


PHOTOGRAPHS BY CHRISTOPHER B. CORDER/THE WASHINGTON TIMES
A traffic jam gathers on New York Avenue in the District (above), and the NavTraffic system (left) displays a warning of traffic congestion on the Woodrow Wilson Memorial Bridge.Upset that Virginians’ taxes were not recently raised to construct more roads, State Delegate Brian J. Moran, Alexandria and Fairfax Democrat, declares that “Government has an important role to play in strengthening our infrastructure, developing our economy and creating new jobs” (“Virginia’s transportation conundrum,” Op-Ed, Tuesday). Not so fast.
Infrastructure that we today naively suppose must be supplied by government has in the past often been supplied by the private sector - supplied so well, indeed, that these private-infrastructure projects helped to spark the Industrial Revolution in 18th-century Britain. Harvard University historian David S. Landes explains:
“At the same time, the British were making major gains in land and water transport. New turnpike roads and canals, intended primarily to serve industry and mining, opened the way to valuable resources, linked production to markets, facilitated the division of labor. Other European countries were trying to do the same, but nowhere were these improvements so widespread and effective as in Britain. For a simple reason: nowhere else were roads and canals typically the work of private enterprise, hence responsive to need (rather than to prestige and military concerns) and profitable to users…. These roads (and canals) hastened growth and specialization.”
DONALD J. BOUDREAUX
Chairman
Economics Department
George Mason University
Fairfax
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