Emerging as one of
Washington's predictable summertime rituals is Amtrak's annual
search for ever-larger taxpayer subsidies to keep its trains
running. Serving less than one percent of America's intercity
passengers, Amtrak has lost money in every single year of
operation, and since 2001, annual losses have exceeded a billion
dollars, after running in the $800-900 million range for most of
the 1990s. In 2003, Amtrak managed to lose nearly $1.3 billion, its
worst performance ever. Amtrak's ticket sales don't even cover its
wage and salary costs, and total revenues from all sources cover
less than two-thirds of its costs, leaving it with losses equal to
more than 60 percent of revenues. Amtrak seeks a $1.8 billion
subsidy for FY 2005, but Congress should limit the payment to no
more than the $900 million proposed by the President and demand
that Amtrak adopt the improvements that have worked successfully
for passenger railways in other countries.
In a normal
business confronting the flood of red ink that Amtrak does,
management would hunker down and look for ways to cut costs and
raise revenues. The major airlines, for example, have used this
approach to stay afloat during the past few years of depressed
business following the terrorist attacks of 2001. In response to
burgeoning losses, United Airlines, for example, has pared its
operating costs significantly, and its unionized employees have
agreed to restructured contracts that cut wages and benefits by
$2.5 billion per year. VIA Rail Canada, the Canadian national
passenger rail system, responded similarly when the Canadian
government dramatically reduced rail subsidies, forcing VIA to
improve operations or go out of business. The railroad opted for
the former, and today it carries more passengers than a decade ago,
but at a per passenger mile subsidy two-thirds less than what it
was in 1990.
Amtrak, in
contrast, has done little to reform its costly operations.
Contracts have not been renegotiated, archaic work rules remain
unchanged, and employees have not even been asked to consider wage
reductions to help save the system. And why should they? Despite
exploding losses, Amtrak's management and staff know there are
enough rail fans in Congress to bail them out. Annual federal
subsidies to Amtrak have increased from $571 million in 2000 to
$1.3 billion in 2004.
Despite rising
subsidies, rising losses, and worsening on-time performance, Amtrak
and its supporters see only success. In particular, they cite the
rise in the number of passengers over the past few years and the
possibility that ridership in 2004 will probably reach a record 25
million. But that improvement, while impressive, is primarily the
consequence of a booming economy and special-offer ticket prices
that, on some routes, cost less than taxi fare to the station.
In late April
2004, for example, Amtrak offered to take passengers from
Washington, DC, to Miami for $21.10, and from Washington to Orlando
for $17.10. The fare for a trip from Chicago to Indianapolis was
offered at $6.20. Also in April, Amtrak extended the hours during
which off-peak fares would be available on several of its regional
trains. A year before, Amtrak reduced its fares on the Acela, which
operates on the Northeast Corridor. Not surprisingly, ridership
increased, but losses have widened. Because Amtrak loses money on
every route it operates, the more it sells the more it loses, and
taxpayers make up the difference.
The increase in
rail passengers also reflects a healthy economy that has benefited
all carriers. While Amtrak's passenger total in April was up 4.3
percent from 2003 levels, airlines saw their passenger totals
increase by 11.9 percent over the same period.
Perpetuating
Amtrak's money losing operations is a pliant Congress willing to
cover the railroad's worsening loses with taxpayer bailouts.
Earlier this year, Amtrak claimed it would need at least $1.8
billion annually to stay in operation, up substantially from the
$1.3 billion subsidy it currently receives. In response, Senator
Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) attached an amendment to the highway
bill that rounds up Amtrak's request to the nearest billion by
proposing it receive $2 billion per year between FY 2004 and FY
2009. Her amendment will have to be resolved in the House/Senate
conference. To his credit, President Bush cited the inclusion of
Hutchison's bailout as one of several costly provisions now in the
highway bill that will force his veto.
Senator
Hutchison's unexpected generosity, however, has emboldened Amtrak's
management. The month after the Senate's generous giveaway,
Amtrak's president announced at a press conference that he would
ask Congress for an extra $3 billion for a five-year project to
fund short-haul passenger lines. Meanwhile, an Amtrak spokesman
told reporters that the system would soon ask Congress for $40
billion over the next five years, and $60 billion over ten, to
invest in passenger rail service.
Before Congress
agrees to provide Amtrak with any more money than the minimum
needed to maintain current service, it ought to take a close look
at how the Canadians have achieved stunning financial improvements
in their government-owned passenger rail system over the past
decade. Although no two passenger rail systems are alike, Canada's
is more similar to ours than most other national systems because it
serves a widely dispersed, continental-sized market and does so on
rails it shares with freight trains.
Like Amtrak and
other passenger rail systems through out the world, the Canadian
system, VIA, loses lots of money and requires substantial taxpayer
subsidies to operate. Where it differs from most others, however,
is that its management has imposed a series of
productivity-enhancing and cost-saving measures that have
dramatically reduced operating costs over the past dozen years even
as ridership has grown.
Whereas VIA's
government subsidy fell by 41.7 percent between 1990 and 2002, from
$441 million to $257.1 million (Canadian), Amtrak's government
subsidy has increased by 48.1 percent over the same period, from
$629 million to $931.5 million, including "loans." VIA's cost
savings did not stem from major service reductions; over the same
period VIA increased ridership by 15.1 percent, compared to
Amtrak's 5.4 percent increase. While VIA's management has learned
to do a lot more with a lot less, Amtrak's management adopted the
strategy of doing a little more with a lot more.
One of the keys to
reducing costs and raising productivity was a substantial reduction
in VIA's labor force, which in 1990 was badly bloated, even by
Amtrak standards. Between 1990 and 2002, VIA reduced its labor
force by 32.5 percent, from 4,525 employees to 3,054. Over the same
period, Amtrak's workforce fell by 9.1 percent, from 24,523 to
22,298. Relating passengers to workers, these numbers imply that
Amtrak "moves" 105 passengers per year per worker, while one worker
at VIA moves 130 passengers. This suggests that Amtrak could
probably get by with fewer workers.
While VIA's recent
cost and service performance appear impressive, comparing railways
across borders is not without pitfalls and misunderstandings.
Analysis is limited to what data both systems make available to the
public, and those data contain notable gaps. Amtrak, for example,
has not issued a comprehensive annual report since its 2000 fiscal
year, and the monthly performance measures it does provide do not
lend themselves to year-to-year comparisons. At the same time, VIA
has not been without problems: ill considered remarks by its
chairman forced his recent resignation, and its unions are
threatening to strike over wages.
Nonetheless, what
information is available from both systems suggests that Amtrak
could make similar improvements. To this end, Congress should ask
its independent research institutions-the General Accounting
Office, the Congressional Research Service, and the Congressional
Budget Office-to take a close look at the two systems and offer
their findings at open hearings that include other rail experts and
Amtrak and VIA officials.
Ronald D.
Utt, Ph.D., is Herbert and Joyce Morgan Senior Research Fellow in
the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The
Heritage Foundation.