Laugh till you cry wrote on Feb 9
th, 2022 at 9:57pm:
This is why private industry doesn't do infrastructure projects and why infrastructure projects are not commercially viable for investors:
"After 56 years, the people of NSW finally paid off the cost of building the Sydney Harbour Bridge in 1988. However, the toll was still be levied to pay for the under-construction Sydney Harbour Tunnel. Fast forward 30 years and the toll revenue is generally used for road projects across NSW.Jun 25, 2018"
The Snowy Mountains scheme is postulated to have a 'real' rate of return of 1.2% which would not qualify it as a commercial private industry project.
"Later, three major studies of economic doubt emerged (i) by Rose (ii) by Davidson using a critical discount rate of 7% (iii) by McColl. The solution to these doubts, after the experience of 50 years of the Snowy Scheme, is offered. There are two major factors. First, the installations show a longer life than nominally accepted, much longer than the 70 years set for repayment. Second, the art of cost–benefit analysis did not at the time incorporate inflation, so the critics were unable to take it into account. The inflation rate in 1949–1999, not large but monotonically increasing, is 5.8%. Thus Davidson's 7%, which is also the rate of Snowy repayment to government, becomes a “real” rate of 1.2%. Using these concepts, the Snowy becomes, ex-post, a brilliant investment."
That depends. TNT invested in a crappy monorail that slid around the Sydney CBD, empty most of the time. God knows how they cashed in on that.
The Sydney airport line charges $18 to go 13 km, it's money for jam.
The Sydney Opera House stages concerts at $200 to $300 a ticket. Massively subsidised, it never even breaks even. And yet, it gave Australia a soul. Who could imagine Sydney without it? Who could imagine the world without it?
Australia, a nation where builders labourers have opinions about architecture, and managed to conserve much of Sydney's heritage. Think big.