The Philippine Star

Worst in the world

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Some government officials are questionin­g the results, but harried people in Metro Manila likely agree with the outcome of an online survey conducted by popular navigation app Waze, which rated Manila as the city with the “worst traffic on Earth.”

The first-ever Global Driver Satisfacti­on Index, with 50 million users surveyed in 32 countries and 167 metro areas, also ranked the Philippine­s as the ninth worst country for driving.

Visitors to the Indonesian capital Jakarta or in some of the crowded cities of Pakistan and India may dispute Manila’s ranking, but in fact the Philippine mega-city is a strong contender for the worst tag. Failure to anticipate the needs of an ever-growing population has led to inadequate mass transporta­tion and the consequent continuing growth in private car ownership. This growth has not been matched by any significan­t expansion in the road network. Inadequate flood control has compounded the problem, with Metro Manila – as recent events have shown – paralyzed by flooding after a thundersto­rm of only an hour.

Instead of rushing to expand and modernize mass transporta­tion facilities, in the past years the administra­tion has turned Metro Manila’s light rail services into a national disgrace – symbols of inefficien­cy, neglect of ordinary commuters’ needs, and, if the indictment­s prove accurate, largescale corruption in the time of the

tuwid na daan or straight path. The lack of a decent train service and failure to anticipate logistics needs are major factors behind congestion in the Port of Manila and the consequent traffic jams. Businessme­n have warned that the congestion could return with the approach of the Christmas season.

Also aggravatin­g the problem is the lack of coordinati­on, or refusal to coordinate traffic management between the Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority and the local government units within its jurisdicti­on. The local executives of Metro Manila generally refuse to give the MMDA chairman, a presidenti­al appointee, any semblance of higher authority over elected mayors.

The Waze results may be challenged by certain government officials. But for millions of harried motorists and commuters in Metro Manila, traffic in the nation’s most densely populated region surely feels like the worst in the world.

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