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Old March 7th 07, 03:58 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
Jon Jon is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Oct 2005
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On 7 Mar, 16:14, Adrian wrote:

But people already pay according to their usage of the roads - and the
efficiency of their vehicle. Have you seen how high the taxation is on
fuel?


They do not pay in anything like direct proportion to mileage. A
average-mileage driver cutting their annual mileage by, say, 5% will
not gain a 5% fall in their costs, (and one increasing their annual
mileage by 5% will not pay a 5% increase). Obviously there will be
some change, but it will be smaller than the change in mileage (the
exact relation between the change in mileage and in costs will vary as
many factors are involved).

Road pricing could bring about a much closer relationship between the
two, thus increasing the rewards for drivers who reduce their mileage
without having any impact upon average-mileage drivers (and
discouraging driving additional miles).

Jon