Aside from law firms and the business thereof—my genuine professional
passion—I must occasionally share a personal passion, but only
if it touches upon economics. One personal passion is the almost unimaginable centrality of the subway system to New York City as it exists today.
Today’s threatened subway strike
in New York (which was averted by "stopping the clock" for four more
days, at which point we’ll be on the brink again barring a settlement),
is such an occasion for breaking the rules about what you come to "Adam Smith, Esq." expecting.
What on earth do the subways have to do with economics and business? Plenty.
If you look at a map of downtown New York in 1900, before the subways
were built, there were no skyscrapers. Look at the same map 10
years later (the first, primary, branch of the IRT opened in 1903,
from City Hall to Harlem), and you will see a virtual curtain wall
of skyscrapers down Wall Street and Broadway. Did engineering
technology change? No—what changed was the ability of the
subways—the physical infrastructure of the city—to deliver
the throngs of office workers from Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx
needed to make those skyscrapers economically viable.
The same is no less true today.
New York could not live without it.
Courtesy of the WSJ:
FAST MTA FACTS
Transportation Authority and its buses, subways and trains…
• Carry 7,711,945 passengers on
the average weekday
• Have 343 routes, 8,259
train and subway cars, 4,895 buses, 2,058 miles of track, 2,967 miles
of bus routes, 734 train stations, and 63,884 employees
• Give New Yorkers about 2.4
billion rides each year
• Carry roughly one in every
three users of mass transit nationwide and two-thirds of rail riders.
• Serve 14.6 million people in
New York City, Long Island, southeastern New York and Connecticut.
• Are used by four of every
five rush-hour commuters in New York City.
• Had a 2004 operating budget
of $8.0 billion
• Last went on strike in 1980,
when they were out for 11 days
Source: MTA, Associated
Press