Lexington Books
Pages: 210
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-7123-3 • Hardback • June 2012 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-9068-5 • Paperback • December 2013 • $53.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-7124-0 • eBook • June 2012 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Daniel Albalate is assistant professor of economics at the University of Barcelona.
Germà Bel is professor of economics at the University of Barcelona.
Part 1. Introduction
Chapter 1. Development of the High Speed Rail in the World
Chapter 2. High Speed Rail in the US: An Overview of the Debate
Chapter 3. High Speed Rail: The Analytical Framework
Part 2. Case Studies Worldwide
Chapter 4. Japan: ‘Shinkansen’
Chapter 5. France: ‘Train à Grande Vitesse’ (TGV)
Chapter 6. Germany: “Neubaustrecken”
Chapter 7. Spain: ‘Alta Velocidad Española’ (AVE)
Chapter 8. China:’Zhongguó gaosù tielù’
Chapter 9. Other Experiences: Italy, Korea, and Taiwan
Part 3. An Evaluation of High Speed Rail
Chapter 10. Lessons from International Experiences
Chapter 11. Conclusions: Desires, Beliefs and Reality
This authoritative contribution to the literature on high-speed rail is rigorous, comprehensive, and timely. This book is a must-read for anyone truly interested in understanding the economics and politics of high-speed rail.
— Rick Geddes, Cornell University
Albalate and Bel have written a book that should be required reading for transportation planners and government policymakers in the US. They chronicle the experience with HSR from around the world and distill important lessons for the US. They challenge policymakers to "renounce the modernity offered by HSR" and instead look closely at territorial, mobility, demographic, and economic characteristics of their location to decide if HSR is the best investment. Albalate and Bel write a careful analysis of HSR efforts in Japan, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, China, So. Korea, Taiwan and the US – showing difference in finance (public, private and mixed), territory, emphasis on passenger or freight, changes in consumer demand and impacts on economic development in the nodes and the wider region. Their overall conclusion: "Caution."
— Mildred E. Warner, Cornell University
[Daniel Albalate and Germà Bel] provide by far the most comprehensive review of the international experience with high speed rail in Europe and Asia, and mine it for insights on the circumstances in which high speed rail is financially viable, environmentally sensible, and politically irresistible. It’s a cautionary tale of how infrastructure systems can get overbuilt.
— Jose A. Gomez-Ibanez, Harvard University
Two Spanish economics professors have written this book to inform the debate on high-speed rail (HSR) in the US, using the international HSR experience. Most valuable are the separate chapters describing HSR in Japan, France, Germany, Spain, and China. These chapters include sections titled Objectives and Motivation; Structure, Design and Functions; Spending and Profitability; Demand and Modal Competition; Economic and Regional Impacts; and Environment and Other Externalities. The experiences are sobering for anyone thinking HSR can be built and operated profitably in the US. Public-private partnership (PPP) advocates, take note. The book warns strongly against political pressures to build HSR in less populated areas since HSR has drained economic activity from smaller cities to the major cities. Instead, HSR should connect only hubs with significant existing travel markets since HSR does not significantly increase (‘induce’) travel. The bibliography and index are excellent. There is no comparable published book, despite the burgeoning literature on HSR. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Students, upper-division undergraduate and up; faculty and researchers; professionals; general readers.
— Choice Reviews
The Economics and Politics of High Speed Rail provides a very methodical look at the basic economics and, to a lesser extent, politics behind the growth in high-speed rail (HSR) services around the world. ...The book, is in fact, largely a synthesis of what others have found regarding the HSR networks that a number of countries have developed. This approach makes the volume a very accessible read. ...Those with an interest in the development of HSR will certainly find a wealth of information systematically presented on its development together with an outline of some elements of its impacts.
— E-International Relations