Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7496913 | Transport Policy | 2018 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
In the paper, we analyse two significant cases of delusions of success, namely the Italian and Spanish HSR programmes. The Italian one shows excellent demand performances, but is among the continent's worst cases for construction costs. The Spanish one, recognised worldwide as one of the most successful outcomes of HS policy, is the one where potential demand estimations were systematically neglected, and the planned network appears largely out-of-scale compared to actual traffic. In both cases, the forecasts were not simply biased, as well-known literature on megaproject failures has clearly shown: Italian lines were deliberately designed to increase the cost, and the Spanish network was deliberately planned out-of-scale. By means of the two cases, the paper will show that the core of the problem does not lie in the wrong estimations, but in deliberate choices of overinvestment, overdesign and overquality.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Social Sciences
Geography, Planning and Development
Authors
Paolo Beria, Raffaele Grimaldi, Daniel Albalate, Germà Bel,