Making Transportation Smart in Emerging Market Cities

Making Transportation Smart in Emerging Market Cities

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Cities have long been the engine for global growth, and they increasingly rely on technology and data to run well. Unfortunately, despite more than a decade of buzzwords, from the ‘Internet of Things’ to ‘smart cities’, we still under-invest in understanding and using the data our cities create, and this is especially true for public transportation. For all the technological advances in recent decades, public transport policy prescriptions look basically the same as 80 years ago: build big, expensive subway systems, then run some large buses to complete a city-wide network. For emerging market cities that have yet to build out large formal transport networks, we suggest an alternative. In these cities, public transport is largely informal, made up of a huge route network of unsubsidised minibus-taxis, all run by independent operators. Why strand these assets in pursuit of the shiny next step? Instead, relatively cheap upgrades can make informal public transport the best way to get around town for everyone.

Information Age | Making Transportation Smart in Emerging Market Cities