White Paper: How to Fix America’s Crumbling Infrastructure — Lessons from Australia

The term “infrastructure” has no universally accepted meaning in economics or elsewhere, but it usually carries with it particular characteristics, such as being capital intensive, with large, long-lived and sunk cost characteristics; publicly consumed in the commons with externality and public good qualities; and government-centric in terms of funding, planning, and heavy-handed regulation.
Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!







