The Value of Arizona's State Highway System

The Value of Arizona's State Highway System

Author: Nadia Mansour

Publisher:

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 68

ISBN-13:

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Government agencies and private sector corporations tend to approach financial reporting in different ways. Presenting government agency financial information using corporate-style reporting would accomplish two specific goals. First, it might provide a more economically sound picture of the financial status of governmental undertakings. The private sector approaches issues of subsidization, revenue generation, depreciation, inflation, etc., in a different way than governments generally do. Using private sector techniques will, therefore, present a different perspective on the financial status of the state highway system than is currently reported by the Arizona Department of Transportation. Secondly, because legislators, the media and the general public are more familiar with private sector financial reporting, presenting government data in a similar fashion may improve communication between government agencies and these groups.


Factual Review

Factual Review

Author: Arizona. Highway Department. Planning Survey Division

Publisher:

Published: 1950

Total Pages: 78

ISBN-13:

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Includes highway department organization; road systems of Arizona, including interstate highways; financing and cost, road mileage, population changes, passenger car speeds, traffic flow, traffic accidents, motor vehicle registration, and sufficiency ratings.


The Value of the RARF Freeway System

The Value of the RARF Freeway System

Author: Jason Carey

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 124

ISBN-13:

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This report uses foundation and format developed in Phase I of SPR 475; the Value of Arizona's State Highway System: A Corporate-Style Financial Analysis", report number FHWA-AZ-99-475(1); and adapts it to measure the financial performance of the Maricopa County freeways funded by the Regional Area Road Fund (RARF). The basic findings of this research can be summarized as follows: Under the assumptions of corporate-style accounting, the RARF freeway system has operated at a substantial loss over the past 12 years; These losses are projected to continue through the Maricopa Association of Governments system life cycle build-out in 2007; The average returns earned by the RARF Freeway System over the last five years lag those of other transportation and capital-intensive industries.