tldr: Passenger rail is stupidly expensive. It's only "cheaper to run" if you completely ignore the billions of dollars a year that it costs.
subways are cheaper to run.
No, they're not. Again...I would think that common sense would show this. When you build a road, what exactly is needed to keep it operating? Sure it might be nice to have streetlights. But those are optional. Rail requires fuel or electricity to run. It requires staff to keep it running. It requires engineers and safety inspections. A road, if it starts to go bad, it gets bumpy. A railway, if it goes bad...people die. BART, which covers
104 miles of track,
employs over 3300 people. That's 33 full time employees for every mile of track. How many full time employees do you think are needed to maintain a mile of road? Roads are
obviously cheaper to maintain.
So...are you assuming that passenger fares pay for the difference? Nope. Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan are the only countries in the world that run profitable passenger rail systems. Everywhere else, they operate at a substantial loss paid through taxpayer subsidies.
How much is that loss? What portion of operating costs do passenger fares actually pay for?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farebox_recovery_ratioIn the US, fare recovery ratio is a good as 71%, down to as low as 9%. The US is generally towards the least efficient end of things, but plenty of other countries have numbers within that range. A few examples:
* In Austin Texas, the fare recovery ratio is 9%. For every dollar fare paid by a passenger, the government pays roughly
ten dollars to Capital Metro to keep the system running
* In Los Angeles, the ratio is 30.6%. For every dollar paid by the passenger, the city pays $2.26
* In Amsterdam, the ratio is 41%. For every dollar of fare paid by the passenger, the government pays $1.43
* In Brussels, it's 35.2%. For every dollar paid by the passenger, the government pays $1.84
* In Munich, it's 42%. Good for Germany. For every dollar paid by the passenger, their government pays only $1.38 to keep their system running.
Great Britain, with a staggeringly excellent fare recovery ratio of 91%, for every dollar their passengers pay, the government pays only nine cents. They're doing
extremely well.
But...what does "exxtremely well" actually cost them? What kind of net numbers are we talking about? Let's look at the link for Great Britain I gave in my previous post:
http://dataportal.orr.gov.uk/displayreport/html/html/bfee944f-5d61-42ee-a4ad-df41d02ef567"Government subsidy towards the railway industry in 2012-13 was £5,060 million (£5.1 billion), this is £524 million greater than the previous year."Since 2010, Great Britain has been spending between 4 and 6 BILLION dollars per year subsidizing its 10,000 miles of rail. California has 15,000 miles of state highways and pays only 2.4 billion to maintain them.
That works out to be, Great Britain...one of the best countries in the world in terms of rail cost efficiency...is subsidizing payments of $500,000 per mile of rail. California is paying $160,000 per mile of highway. It costs Britain
three times as much per mile to maintain its rail system as California pays for its highways.
Yes, there are a very few individual cities where rail can cost less to maintain than roads.
Tokyo Metro even runs a net profit. In the vast majority of cases, this is not the case.
If you're going to compare subway vs. robotaxi, you need to take into account running cost and the buying of all those taxis.
Only if the government will be subsidizing them. If google invests the required hundreds of millions of dollars to build a robot taxi fleet, then recovers those costs through operation at no cost to taxpayers or the government, it's not reasonable to include that investment when doing cost analysis comparison vs a subway that takes billions of dollars of tax money to build so that it can then charge people per trip while simultaneously continuing to collect tax-funded subsidies to continue running.
Taxi services are generally not subsidized like rail is. In fact, in some places taxi fares are
taxed to pay for rail subsidies:
http://taxicabtimes.com/ny-taxis-still-taxed-to-subsidize-mta-p1964-99.htm"One of the controversial taxes for the taxi industry in New York is the 50 cent surcharge that is used to subsidize the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. The tax began in 2009 after it was included in the $2.3 billion bailout package for the MTA that passed in May of that year by the New York State Legislature. Although the bailout prevented service cuts and a large fare increase for public transportation riders, the tax raised the base charge of a cab ride from $2.50 to $3."So there you have it. In New York, if you pay to ride the subway, the government is paying the subway on top of your fare, because the subway operates at a loss. And if you pay to ride a taxi...you pay for somebody else to ride the subway because the subway operates at a loss.