primary challenges to improving public transport in south africa by siyaduma biniza.pdf
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The Primary Challenges to Improving Public Transport in South Africa
Written by Siyaduma Biniza*
Integrating the minibus taxi industry is integral to public transport development in
South Africa. However, co-ordinating with the taxi industry remains a challenge.
Furthermore, the spatial legacy of Apartheid policies has made it difficult to ensure the
economic viability of future public transport development and adversely affected
transport demand. Therefore, this essay argues that co-ordination problems with the
taxi industry, high transport costs associated with the spatial legacy of Apartheid and
unsustainable public transport demand are primary challenges for public transport
development in South Africa.
Deregulation of the taxi industry by the Apartheid government in the late 1980s
allowed the establishment of the taxi industry but also had the machinated
consequence of outspread violence as operators fought for their share of the market
(Sekhonyane and Dugard 2004). Nevertheless, minibus taxi services have grown
substantially over the years causing drastic market share losses for bus services
(Mathetha and Kenny 2008). Therefore, aside from the legitimate significance as the
oldest source of black economic empowerment, the taxi industry has established itself
as the primary mode of public transport (Coetzer 2010). Thus public transport
development needs to take this industry into account and integrate it; especially since
the industry operators have a legacy of responding to competition with violence
(Sekhonyane and Dugard 2004).
Deregulation has resulted in there being no centralised organisation to represent the
entire minibus taxi industry and alliances are volatile and expedient-driven (Coetzer
2010). Consequently governments attempts to integrate the minibus taxi industry in
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public transport developments, such as the National Taxi Task Team and the Taxi
Recapitalisation Programme, have had very little success at best (Sekhonyane and
Dugard 2004). Thus, public transport development is challenged by co-ordination
problems when dealing with the minibus taxi industry.
The SAICE Infrastructure Report for 2011 highlights the importance of a holistic systems
approach and sustainability as critical factors for South Africas infrastructure
development (Wall 2011). Therefore, achieving the best combination for the public
transport is more important than decisions on which mode to invest in; making
identifying the demand a priority over which mode to deliver (Mulley 2012). Thus,
integration of existing networks and understanding the demand is very important for
effective public transport development.
But public transport in South Africa serves the need to move labour from peripheral
residential areas into centralised workplaces resulting in limited off-peak services (CSIR
2000). Furthermore, the spatial legacy of Apartheid has resulted in the average distance
travelled by public transport being more than twice the average distance in other
developing countries (Coetzer 2010). Therefore, public transport costs are much higher
for many of the poorest citizens; making many routes economically unviable (Coetzer
2010).
Consequently, public transport demand has been adversely affected by this spatial
legacy of Apartheid; making it more difficult to ensure the economic viability of any
future public transport developments. Most of the commuters use public transport
twice a day during two peak-times between 06:00-09:00 and 16:00-18:00 so public
transport services and infrastructure remains underutilised for most of the operating
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time which increases costs (Coetzer 2010). Therefore, the spatial legacy of Apartheid
has made the operating costs unique highly and demand unsustainable.
Thus, primary challenges for public transport development in South Africa are: co-
ordinating public transport improvements with the taxi industry, high operating costs
due to the spatial legacy of Apartheid and the unsustainable demand. The taxi industry
cannot be neglected but co-ordinating with it remains a persistent challenge. And, in
addition to uniquely high operating costs, the unsustainable demand makes it difficult
to ensure economic viability of any public transport developments.
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* Siyaduma Biniza is a recent graduate holding a B.Soc.Sci in Politics, Philosophy and Economics
from the University of Cape Town.