Despite 27 years of federal subsidies
amounting to more than $30 billion (in 1998 dollars), Amtrak's
financial condition today is as bad as it ever has been. Its track
record is so poor that recent reports from the U.S. General
Accounting Office (GAO) question whether Amtrak will be able to
survive in the future without receiving substantially greater
federal subsidies. Fortunately for U.S. taxpayers and rail
passengers, innovative opportunities for fundamental reform of the
Amtrak system are emerging. Several private investors and
transportation companies are offering to acquire some or all of
Amtrak's rail system and make its operation profitable, as other
countries have done successfully around the world.
Numerous recommendations to privatize
Amtrak have been proposed in the past. In fact, privatization
proposals were a regular feature in President Ronald Reagan's
budget submissions during the 1980s. The President's Commission on
Privatization in 1988 endorsed the privatization of Amtrak in its
published report one year after President Reagan successfully
privatized Conrail, the government-owned freight rail system
serving northeastern and mid-Atlantic states. Despite the
government's success with Conrail, however, Congress rejected
proposals to privatize Amtrak. In the late 1980s, proponents of the
status quo correctly argued that passenger rail service was an
unprofitable government monopoly throughout the world, and that no
investors had expressed interest in acquiring the Amtrak rail
system.
In
the past ten years, however, the passenger rail business has
changed significantly both in the United States and abroad. Such
countries as Argentina, Great Britain, Japan, and New Zealand have
privatized passenger rail service successfully through a variety of
creative mechanisms. There has been no shortage of investors and
qualified businesses eager to acquire their failing systems and
invest tens of billions of dollars to modernize them. Their
successes have encouraged efforts to replicate them in a growing
list of countries, which includes Australia, Germany, Sweden, and
Taiwan, whose governments concluded that socialized rail service is
a thing of the past.
Congress and the White House recently
enacted a series of initiatives to improve Amtrak, but their plans
rely on increased government spending and additional layers of
bureaucracy. Their approaches represent nothing more than costly,
but temporary, life support--not the fundamental reform that Amtrak
needs in order to become financially self-sufficient. These recent
legislated changes also will not make Amtrak competitive with more
attractive forms of intercity transportation, such as private
automobiles, or with buslines and airlines that have benefited from
professional management and entrepreneurial zeal.
Despite the recent and rapid deterioration
of every facet of Amtrak's business, including its financial
integrity, several investors and transportation companies have
contacted the U.S. Department of Transportation formally to request
that discussions and negotiations to acquire the rail system be
opened. To date, the government has not responded to these
requests, and it continues to ignore the opportunity that these
requests provide. Congress should use this opportunity to rectify
nearly three decades of counterproductive policies by reopening the
Amtrak issue and by giving the privatization option the same
serious consideration now commonplace in other countries. Indeed,
Members of the House already have introduced legislation to
privatize Amtrak, and hearings on the Amtrak Privatization Act
(H.R. 1666) offer Congress an excellent opportunity to evaluate the
proposals of investors who hope to acquire some or all of Amtrak's
system.
Congress should require the Clinton
Administration to engage immediately in good-faith negotiations
with these and any other prospective buyers, and to set a date by
which the transaction should be completed. Accepting even one of
the offers would allow the United States to join with countries
like Argentina, Great Britain, Japan, and New Zealand that
successfully privatized some or all of their passenger rail
systems. Transferring ownership and management of the Amtrak rail
system to private investors would bring an end to an era of poor
service and costly subsidies that now exceed $1 billion per
year.