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CONGRESS SHOULD PROMPTLY PASS TRANSPORTATION FUNDING BILLS TO AVERT ECONOMIC HARM DOCUMENTED BY NEW CIVIL ENGINEERS' REPORT, 麻豆传媒 SAYS

Cutting Surface and Air Transportation Infrastructure Investment Will Cost All Consumers and Firms While Adding to Misery for Hard-Hit Construction Industry, Association Economist Notes

In response to a from the American Society of Civil Engineers documenting the harm to the economy from underinvesting in transportation infrastructure, Ken Simonson, the chief economist for the Associated General Contractors of America, issued the following statement:

鈥淣ot all spending cuts are equal鈥攃utting infrastructure investment ultimately costs the economy more than it might save in the short-term, as this study makes clear,鈥 Simonson said, referring to ASCE鈥檚 report, Failure to Act: The Economic Impact of Current Investment Trends in Surface Transportation. 鈥淎s the report cogently points out, the continued deterioration of surface transportation infrastructure 鈥榣eaves a significant and mounting burden on the U.S. economy.鈥欌

鈥淐ongress' failure to pass federal aviation legislation has brought approximately $2.5 billion worth of airport construction and improvement projects to a halt. The lack of action on renewing the Highway Trust Fund threatens to shut down as much as $50 billion per year of vitally needed highway and transit improvements. While the immediate victims of this neglect will be construction workers and companies, this report makes clear that the damage from underinvestment will be felt by every consumer and business.鈥