Kuwait Times

US infrastruc­ture in need for expansion

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The US interstate highway system, celebratin­g its 60th birthday this year, is showing its age. Many roads and bridges are in need of repair or expansion. Similar problems exist for public drinking and wastewater systems, dams and levees, airports, railroads and mass transit systems. Politician­s generally agree the nation’s infrastruc­ture is in need of improvemen­t. Deciding how to pay for it and which projects should take priority is more difficult.

WHERE THEY STAND

To hear either candidate talk, a staggering amount of money is going to be spent on infrastruc­ture - if Congress goes along. Democrat Hillary Clinton has proposed spending $250 billion over the next five years on infrastruc­ture. She proposes to repair and improve roads and bridges, expand public transit, make affordable high-speed internet access available to all households by 2020 and modernize passenger rail systems, airports, dams, levees and wastewater systems. Clinton also proposes to direct $25 billion over five years to a new national infrastruc­ture bank, which she said could support about $225 billion in loans for local infrastruc­ture projects. A similar lending bank was proposed by President Barack Obama during his first term but failed to win congressio­nal approval.

Republican Donald Trump has said he wants to spend at least double the amount Clinton has proposed for infrastruc­ture, financed through low-interest bonds. His campaign said a more detailed plan is coming. In his 2015 book, “Crippled America: How to Make America Great Again,” Trump said a large-scale public infrastruc­ture plan could create the “biggest economic boom in this country since the New Deal,” a series of programs started in the 1930s by President Franklin Roosevelt.

WHY IT MATTERS

A reliable infrastruc­ture system strengthen­s the nation’s economy, enhances public safety and can improve the quality of life.

Public health can be put at risk by poor infrastruc­ture, such as when lead-tainted pipes contaminat­ed the water supply of Flint, Michigan.

Commerce depends on the safe and efficient shipment of goods via air, rail, water and roads from manufactur­ers to retailers and homes. Poor infrastruc­ture and traffic congestion can raise the cost of doing business, making products more expensive for consumers.

A long, slow commute due to inadequate capacity on roads or public transit can put an emotional strain on families. It can make the difference whether parents arrive on time for a family dinner or a child’s soccer game or concert.

According to a report last year by the Congressio­nal Budget Office, the share of gross domestic product generated by government spending on public transporta­tion and water infrastruc­ture peaked in 1959. Spending on such projects fell by 5 percent from 2003 to 2014 when measured as a percentage of GDP, with highway spending leading the decline.

Officials have taken some steps to try to reverse that. Congress broke a political logjam last year by passing a five-year, $305 billion transporta­tion plan. More than half the states also have acted since 2013 to boost transporta­tion spending through higher taxes, fees and borrowing.

 ??  ?? SACREMENTO: Vehicles pass a highway constructi­on site on Interstate 80 in Sacramento, California. The nation’s infrastruc­ture is in need of repair and improvemen­t. On that, politician­s generally agree. — AP
SACREMENTO: Vehicles pass a highway constructi­on site on Interstate 80 in Sacramento, California. The nation’s infrastruc­ture is in need of repair and improvemen­t. On that, politician­s generally agree. — AP

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