Privatizing and Deregulating Local Public Services Lessons from Britain's Buses
- 31 March 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of the American Planning Association
- Vol. 56 (1) , 9-21
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01944369008975740
Abstract
The British Transport Act of 1985 ordered one of the most radical efforts to privatize and deregulate local public services in a developed country. With the exception only of companies serving the Greater London metropolitan area, all public bus companies in Great Britain were ordered reorganized as for-profit corporations; any bus company could offer any unsubsidized (commercial) bus services simply by giving local authorities notice; and local authorities could supplement the commercial services with subsidized ones, but only through competitive bidding among the newly privatized carriers. This article examines the experience of the first two years of the new British policy and argues that it offers important, and generally hopeful, lessons about the potential for privatizing and deregulating local buses and other services in the United States and elsewhere.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Urban Travel Behavior as the Outcome of Public Policy: The Example of Modal-Split in Western Europe and North AmericaJournal of the American Planning Association, 1988
- Deregulating the bus industry in Britain — (C) a responseTransport Reviews, 1985
- Deregulating the bus industry in Britain — (A) the proposalsTransport Reviews, 1985
- AN EXAMINATION OF THE COST STRUCTURES ASSOCIATED WITH PROVIDING URBAN BUS SERVICES IN BRITAIN*Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 1985
- Autos, Transit, and CitiesPublished by Harvard University Press ,1981
- The General Theory of Second BestThe Review of Economic Studies, 1956