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The high cost of gridlock: $166 billion per year

Codes and Standards

The high cost of gridlock: $166 billion per year

Growing economy means more jobs, more cars, more hours stuck in traffic.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | August 29, 2019
The high cost of gridlock: $166 billion per year

Photo: Pixabay

  

As the economy hums along creating more jobs, the unfortunate byproduct has been worsening traffic.

The Texas A&M Transportation Institute’s 2019 Urban Mobility Report found that urban gridlock costs the U.S. economy $166 billion annually in lost productivity and wasted gasoline. There is no single, simple solution to the problem.

Possible remedies include more roads and mass transit, and reducing demand through telework. Adjusting work hours to better balance demand and roadway capacity, and smarter land use policies could also provide relief.

The report examines conditions in 494 urban areas across all states and Puerto Rico. The institute has also made available a nationwide interactive map of congestion conditions and  dozens of ways to address roadway gridlock in its How to Fix Congestion guide.

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