Originally appeared on The Morning
By Dhananath Fernando
A new proposal is under discussion to encourage travelling to work by bicycle. No doubt any policymaker who pays a trip to Europe may observe many people commuting to work by bicycle and on foot. So it is normal for anyone to think “if Europeans can do it, why can’t we?”
Some may even believe that countries in Europe have become developed nations because of behaviour involving “a healthier way of life”; commuting to work by bicycles and using electronic vehicles to reduce pollution.
That line of thought is no different to thinking that the work of Usain Bolt, the Olympic Gold Medallist is easy – running 100 metres in about 10 seconds while accumulating millions of dollars in wealth. All this while many other people cannot come close to accumulating the same amount of wealth even by working throughout their lifetime.
But what many fail to realise is that Bolt had to put about 20 years or more of training to run that 100 metre in 10 seconds under Olympic game conditions. Similarly, most of the outcomes are a result of a series of policies which go hand in hand with culture, geography, and many other economic factors.
There is no doubt that cycling is good for health and it will help reduce emissions as well. But if policymakers are deeply interested in encouraging people to cycle to work, it has a lot to do with Sri Lanka’s land, housing, and tariffs on construction materials policy rather than being purely based on cycling.
You may ask how ‘cycling to work’ is connected to housing, construction tariffs, and land policy?
It goes without saying that people can cycle to work when they reside at a reasonable distance from their workplaces. When many of the members of the workforce live far away from their workplace, they have to have a convenient mode of transportation not only for reporting to work but also for other personal needs. Given the poor public transportation and lack of interest in developing public transportation, the reasonable option available for the middle class is to have their own vehicle.
As Sri Lanka became a middle-income country, many could afford a vehicle even at very high border taxes, which are as high as above 100%. So for the average middle class, the available reasonable choice is to reside far from the city limits (main cities such as Colombo, Gampaha, Kandy, and Galle) and commute in their personal vehicles.
The question is why people reside so far away from city limits. It is mainly because housing is not affordable within city limits. Unaffordability of housing is due to two main reasons. First, about 82% of the land in Sri Lanka is owned by the Government, including prime properties within city limits. So land prices are very high due to the Government holding land for completely unproductive enterprises.
A simple walk around Colombo would bring to view a number of single-storeyed State buildings where the space is utilised in a very unproductive manner due to poor city planning and excessive regulation.
Secondly, our cost of construction is very high due to tariffs and paratariffs. Hence, the cost of productive land usage housing schemes such as apartments have become only affordable to the elite and not the middle class. Our floor tiles, wall tiles, cement, steel, construction, aluminium, electrical material and a long list of other materials are more expensive than the global market prices. This is due to very high tariff rates that do not generate much revenue for the Government but only benefit a few protectionist industries, which is called ‘rent’ in economic terms. On housing projects there is a regulation which stipulates that every apartment should have a parking space.
A young professional who uses mobile app-based taxi services or lives at a walking distance to their office does not necessarily need to pay for the land, bearing the construction cost for a 300 Sq.Ft. parking slot in an 800 Sq.Ft. apartment. It is such regulations that drive the housing prices within city limits and minimise choice for the consumer.
As a result we have very few vertical housing schemes that are affordable to the working middle class located within city limits. Young professionals who could easily settle in a two-bedroom apartment within walking or cycling distance to their workplace now have to buy unproductively utilised and expensive land far away from the city, along with a vehicle to commute to work.
If the middle class has housing options within city limits, they would be the happiest to settle in Colombo. They can save their hard-earned money on an apartment property which is a transferable asset rather than purchasing five-year-old low quality reconditioned vehicles which are subject to a tariff of more than 100% to commute to the workplace, burning fuel in the congested and traffic-riddled city streets.
When middle-class aspirational Sri Lankans can afford to reside in the city where they will be able to use a bike instead of a reconditioned vehicle to commute to work, it is then that we will achieve the objective of saving fuel and minimising emissions and valuable foreign exchange, thus increasing productivity across the board.
A few years ago the Colombo Mayor and Dutch Ambassador also promoted cycling on weekends. It just became a typical Colombo event and now we hardly see people cycling in Colombo. Often cyclists in Colombo are lottery sellers selling a dream of a fortune to the working middle class and aspirational Sri Lankans, where they can buy a house if they have the luck on a State-issued lottery ticket.
Additionally, we have to remember that there are regions in Europe where it’s less humid than Sri Lanka, so cycling to work is easier than in a tropical country.
If our policymakers really want to see a city of cyclists, they have to start working on our land policy, housing, and tariffs on construction. If we set those policies right, many more developments will be achieved rather than just producing cycling professionals within city limits.
The Government will need to consider enforcing traffic laws and providing cycling space to enable safe and easy cycling to and from work.
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The opinions expressed are the author’s own views. They may not necessarily reflect the views of the Advocata Institute or anyone affiliated with the institute.