The 2008 New Zealand public transport management act: rationale, key provisions, and parallels with the United Kingdom
The 2008 New Zealand public transport management act: rationale, key provisions, and parallels with the United Kingdom
In January 2009, following a lengthy industry review and consultation process, the New Zealand Public Transport Management Act (PTMA) came into force. The Act allows Regional Transport Authorities, as the primary procurers of public transport services, to place either a control or a contracting requirement upon services that are registered as commercial requiring no subsidy. The imposition of either the control or the contracting requirement is designed to facilitate greater system integration, improve service continuity and enhance services to the customer, andallow the Authority to invest in key strategic projects, such as integrated fares and ticketing, so as to grow patronage.
The PTMA’s other objective is to ensure improved value for public subsidies. Recent years have seen significant subsidy inflation for seemingly little commensurate benefits. The Act will allow the Regional Transport Authority to achieve greater value for money through improved farebox, a shift to longer, larger contracts to increase competition in the market, a more appropriate allocation of risk, and the removal of the ability of operators to ‘game’ the current system by using strategically placed commercial services as barriers to competition.
Similar concerns have also stimulated new legislation in the UK and this paper illustrates the parallels in the environment and proposed response.
164-182
Ashmore, David P.
414351fb-6bb8-4836-ba51-c6271c39b932
Mellor, Andrew D.
acb96ada-1687-45f7-8b00-38b3476f70ea
Ashmore, David P.
414351fb-6bb8-4836-ba51-c6271c39b932
Mellor, Andrew D.
acb96ada-1687-45f7-8b00-38b3476f70ea
Ashmore, David P. and Mellor, Andrew D.
(2010)
The 2008 New Zealand public transport management act: rationale, key provisions, and parallels with the United Kingdom.
Research in Transportation Economics, 29 (1), .
(doi:10.1016/j.retrec.2010.07.022).
Abstract
In January 2009, following a lengthy industry review and consultation process, the New Zealand Public Transport Management Act (PTMA) came into force. The Act allows Regional Transport Authorities, as the primary procurers of public transport services, to place either a control or a contracting requirement upon services that are registered as commercial requiring no subsidy. The imposition of either the control or the contracting requirement is designed to facilitate greater system integration, improve service continuity and enhance services to the customer, andallow the Authority to invest in key strategic projects, such as integrated fares and ticketing, so as to grow patronage.
The PTMA’s other objective is to ensure improved value for public subsidies. Recent years have seen significant subsidy inflation for seemingly little commensurate benefits. The Act will allow the Regional Transport Authority to achieve greater value for money through improved farebox, a shift to longer, larger contracts to increase competition in the market, a more appropriate allocation of risk, and the removal of the ability of operators to ‘game’ the current system by using strategically placed commercial services as barriers to competition.
Similar concerns have also stimulated new legislation in the UK and this paper illustrates the parallels in the environment and proposed response.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 August 2010
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 493696
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493696
ISSN: 0739-8859
PURE UUID: 1125b694-a59e-4873-abe5-632b0fedab40
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 11 Sep 2024 16:31
Last modified: 12 Sep 2024 02:11
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
David P. Ashmore
Author:
Andrew D. Mellor
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics