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Whither the Rail Renaissance? The Specter of Reregulation Haunts America’s Railroads. Marc Scribner Research Fellow Competitive Enterprise Institute mscribner@cei.org. Preserving the American Dream Conference 2013. Overview. Brief history of railroad economic regulation and deregulation
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Whither the Rail Renaissance? The Specter of Reregulation Haunts America’s Railroads Marc Scribner Research Fellow Competitive Enterprise Institute mscribner@cei.org Preserving the American Dream Conference 2013
Overview • Brief history of railroad economic regulation and deregulation • Current position of the railroad industry • Current efforts to reverse partial deregulation • Where we ought to go from here
The Birth of Economic Regulation of U.S. Railroads • Railroads largely unregulated for first two decades • 1844: New Hampshire creates first (advisory) state railroad commission • 1860s-1870s: Grangers gain control of state legislatures and add enforcement power to commissions • 1885: 24 states plus the Dakota Territory have railroad commissions
Federal Intervention and the Early ICC • 1886 – Supreme Court decision in Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway Company v. Illinois greatly limits states’ ability to regulate railroads • 1887 – Interstate Commerce Act enacted; Interstate Commerce Commission created • Weak enforcement powers (ICC could not directly enforce, must sue in federal court) • Undercut by SCOTUS, Interstate Commerce Commission v. Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway Co. (1897) – ICC cannot make law and therefore cannot set rates
A Defanged ICC & Progressive “Fixes” • Progressives and rural populists want an ICC with teeth (Elkins Act (1903) banned rebates but failed to grant direct enforcement) • T. Roosevelt becomes president, makes railroad regulation top priority (1901) • Breaks up Hill/Morgan’s Northern Securities (1904) • Signs Hepburn Act into law (1906) • Aggressive ICC enforcement follows
The World at War • Wartime traffic snarls rail corridors, railroads appeal for 15% general rate increase, denied (1917) • Wilson nationalizes railroads, pools equipment and facilities, increases freight rates by 28% • Transportation Act of 1920 returns rail to private sector • National Transportation Plan begins umbrella ratemaking (1940) • Gasoline and tire rationing, coupled with wartime traffic, boosts fortunes of railroads through WWII Umbrella ratemaking: “the minimum rate for one carrier mode is held higher than it would prefer in order to permit another carrier, with a higher variable cost, to compete” umbrella ratemaking
The Long Decline • Postwar railroads face declining modal shares and revenue, increasing costs, regulatory inflexibility • Industry, academics, and some gov’t officials first recognize harm done by regulation Important: James C. Nelson, “Effects of Public Regulation on Railroad Performance,” American Economic Review, Vol. 50 No. 2, May 1960.
The Death and Life of Great American Railroads • Penn Central files for bankruptcy (1970) • Nixon signs Rail Passenger Service Act creating Amtrak (1970) • 3R Act (1974), 4R Act (1976) (creating Conrail, ending umbrella ratemaking, deregulating produce movements, legalization of contract rates) • Staggers Rail Act (1980) (Title II exempts most movements from rate regulation—180 R/VC rule)
The [Freight] Rail Renaissance ≈500 Class II & III RRs 7 Class I RRs • Operating nearly 140,000 miles of track • Average real rail rates down 44% since 1980 while ton-miles have doubled • Over $20 billion in annual private investment since 2007 • Today, U.S. has lowest freight rail rates in the world • Rail is a critical freight mode
Attempts to Reregulate Since Staggers • Some shippers began seeking ways to reregulate almost immediately following Staggers • Issues are largely related to rates and access • Mostly regulatory and legal battles • So far failed to reverse deregulatory trend • ICC abolished in 1995 and replaced by the Surface Transportation Board • Class I railroads merge into four majors
Recent Events Shaping Current Regulatory Environment • 1998—Ex Parte 575 before the STB: board declines to impose harsh competition policies and defers to Congress • 2000—STB imposes Class I merger moratorium and issues revised policy in 2001 making Class I mergers much more difficult • 2006-present—Herb Kohl and now Amy Klobuchar (top Dems on Senate Judiciary antitrust panel) introduce Railroad Antitrust Enforcement Act in each session • 2007—Railroad Competition and Service Improvement Act introduced by Oberstar and Rockefeller (fails; watered down bill in 2011 also fails)
The Current Proceeding (EP 711) • Result of a National Industrial Transportation League (NIT League) petition in Ex Parte 705, competition in the railroad industry (2011) • Proposal to revise reciprocal switching regulations so that more movements would be subject to forced switching
Reciprocal Switching? • When one rail carrier interchanges rail cars with another rail carrier to access a terminal served by only one of the railroads • Can occur voluntarily, although Class I mergers largely made Class I switching unnecessary
Current Rules Governing Forced Access • The 180 R/VC threshold (49 U.S.C. § 10707(d)) must be met for the STB to consider questions of market dominance • Rates that result in R/VC ≥ 180% do not necessarily provide for forced switching • Under 49 U.S.C. § 11102(c), forced switching may occur if one of the following is determined by the STB: • a mandate is “practicable and in the public interest”; or • “such agreements are necessary to provide competitive rail service”
NIT League’s Proposal Impose forced access if the following four conditions are met: • Shipper served only by a single Class I railroad; • There is no effective intermodal or intramodal competition for the movements in question; • A working interchange exists or could exist within 30 miles of shipper’s facilities; and • Mandating switching is feasible and safe, and would not unduly hamper the affected carrier’s ability to serve its shippers
The Devil in the Details • Condition 2: There is no effective intermodal or intramodal competition for the movements in question • Would impose a “conclusive presumption” of a lack of “effective competition” when: • Rates reach or exceed a 240 R/VC; or • Any carrier has a market share of 75 percent or more • Traditional 180-240 R/VC “public interest” determinations would no longer apply—automatic forced access
Isn’t 240 R/VC Inherently Excessive? • No—rail is a declining-cost industry • High fixed costs • Declining average costs • Marginal costs are less than average costs (so P=MC can’t cover total costs and bankrupts the company) • Most efficient way is to charge highest prices to those with most limited options beyond a given rail carrier (Ramsey pricing)
How Bad Is the Supposed Problem? • R/VC ratios between 180% and 300% are common, accounting for approximately 1/7 of total traffic—although the share has been declining • Over 80% of traffic ≤ 180 R/VC • Segments with highest R/VC ratios are low demand and reflect heightened risk to infrastructure investment • The rate dispute process is currently being streamlined
A Cure Worse than the Disease • Increased reciprocal switching will lead to increased terminal congestion, the most common cause of network congestion • Forced switching will almost certainly lead to service degradation • While rates to some shippers will decrease, average rates are unlikely to fall and the network as a whole will be worse off
Continued Investment is Critical to Future Network Health • To accommodate expected 2035 demand, railroads will need to finance about $150 billion in improvements • Railroad investors have been clear that reregulation will lead them to demand higher dividends at the expense of network investment
Onward! Continue Deregulation • The deregulatory process has not been completed • Residual rate regulation still creates inefficiencies • STB has failed to resolve the longstanding dispute between carriers and shippers • Voluntary arrangements between shippers and carriers should be encouraged to resolve “captive shipper” dispute • Congress should abolish the STB
Whither the Rail Renaissance? The Specter of Reregulation Haunts America’s Railroads Marc Scribner Research Fellow Competitive Enterprise Institute mscribner@cei.org Preserving the American Dream Conference 2013