In an apparent
attempt to make a great deal out of very little, there was a certain amount of
over-reaction to yesterday’s news
about the removal of VAT from the Severn Bridge tolls. On the one hand, the Secretary of State for
Wales declared that this would create "exciting
opportunities for businesses and investors looking to make their mark in
Wales"; whilst at the other extreme we had dire warnings about an
influx from Bristol into Monmouthshire forcing up house prices and putting
untold pressure on schools and surgeries.
The economics
behind these predictions are sound enough in principle, according to the
theories. Changing the price of
something affects the demand for it and people respond accordingly to the
stimulus. But there is another question
involved in this, and that’s the ‘reasonableness test’: in the real world, it’s
not just whether the arithmetic is correct, but whether the projected final totals
look as if they might create the effects predicted.
Let’s do some
simple sums. The difference between the
old toll of £6.70 and the new one of £5.60 amounts to a princely £1.10. Assuming one trip a day, 5 days a week for
around 45 weeks of the year (allowing for holidays etc.), someone commuting
daily to Bristol would save a grand total of £247.50 a year. However, assuming a cost per mile of around
12 pence, moving to a location only 5 miles further away from the place of work
would eat up the whole of that saving, and end up costing more in travel
costs. If the tolls were scrapped
completely, the saving would amount to a more substantial £1500. That starts to look more significant, and
provided that the increased travel distance to work isn’t more than 28 miles, there
might still be a small saving, but the greater the extra travel distance, the
closer to negligible the saving becomes.
So how many
people would really take a decision to move home – with all the disruption and
costs involved in doing so – solely on the basis of such a small sum? Common sense suggests that the number will be
low. That is not to discount the
importance of other factors such as a gap in house prices, but in the scale of
things, the reduction in tolls is small.
For businesses,
of course, the economics work out rather differently, so Alun Cairns’ claims about
the ‘opportunities’ depend on multiplying the effect by the number of crossings
for which a business would have to pay. For
businesses involving little travel between Wales and England, the reduction or
abolition of tolls makes little difference; they will naturally locate on the
side of the estuary whether they trade.
For those needing substantial movements across the estuary, they are likely
to locate on whichever side requires least crossings. Reducing the tolls affects the decision in neither case.
It’s a pity
though – I actually wish that the claims being made did stand up to detailed examination. I’d really like to believe a government could
achieve so much in terms of changing behaviour or promoting economic development from such a small change in
policy at a comparatively low cost to government revenues, instead of merely
generating photo opportunities for ministers.
2 comments:
Another point - business claim back VAT on travel, so removing VAT does not change anything for most businesses!!
Zero charges hide the fact that both Structures require continual maintenance. future replacement and possible major costs in removing structural components
I note that the completion of Crossrail One is to be followed up immediately by Crossrail 2
Something has to be done soon about the Severn Tunnel
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