I think you're misunderstanding something here a bit. Fixed income market is the debt funding market. The fixed income descriptor has nothing to do with the cash flow side of things. It is a fixed income to the creditor. And a fuel levy is not a MBUF method. Just think about what MBUF means, and the fact that not all cars are equal.
Guys listen now, this is getting a little ridiculous. You can keep bitching about E-Tolling all you like, and I agree with you, but you're not going to win on the fixed income market bit. It's just no feasible to fund infrastructure in the debt capital markets with an unknown variable to such an extent to your cash flow. You just will not. You can disagree, but you'll be wrong. Actually let me rephrase my statement. Funding infrastructure in the debt capital markets with a massive risk factor to your primary cash flows would result in the cost of capital becoming so ludicrously expensive that it would probably make more sense to just print the damn money and accept the inflationary hit to the economy instead.
Then I guess we just won't reach an agreement on this matter. If the fixed income market somehow thinks that that the e-tolling revenue model is more stable than the fuel levy model then their argument is completely flawed and it's no wonder the world's economy is in so much crap.
I understand what you are trying to say with regards to fossil fuel's future, but that could be 50 years from now, or 20 years or 10 years. Whereas the e-tolling funding model's revenue is high-risk now, and will be tomorrow and will still be in 20 years or 50 years. If anything they should be considered equal risk, alternatively the e-tolling model should be higher-risk.
The fuel levy might not be an exact MBUF, but it is a very close derivative thereof. The more miles you travel, the more you pay on the fuel levy. I am yet to see a vehicle which stops consuming fuel after a certain amount of distance travelled.
I know you don't support e-tolls, but you might be confusing other people who arrive here and don't have time to read through everything. Just like the fuel levy, the e-tolling system is also a derivative of the MBUF because not all roads are treated equally, and not all users pay equally. I would also fully support a proper MBUF, but for that to work you would need to install GPS-trackers in every vehicle and bill them accordingly. That is a massive operation, compared to the fuel levy which has a very similar effect up to the point where people start switching over to alternative fuels en mass. And that's not happening anytime soon in SA.
EDIT: DJ: If it really is such a massive problem, why does government have to borrow based on fuel levy or e-toll income? Why doesn't it borrow against the tax base? Surely that is more sustainable and stable than both.
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