To help make sense of the maps, charts, and tables below, this edition of GTFS also offers 3 different articles —complete with Visualizations and Descriptive Information:
- Government Transportation Revenue
- Government Transportation Expenditures
- Government Transportation Revenue versus Expenditure
The government plays an important role in the U.S. transportation system, as a provider of transportation infrastructure and as an administrator and regulator of the system. The government spends a large amount of funds on building, rehabilitating, maintaining, operating, and administering the infrastructure system. Government revenue generated from several sources including user fees, taxes from transportation and non-transportation-related activities, borrowing, and grants from federal, state, and local governments primarily supports these activites.
Government Transportation Financial Statistics (GTFS) provides a set of maps, charts, and tables with information on transportation-related revenue and expenditures for all levels of government, including federal, state, and local, and for all modes of transportation.
Related tables can be found in National Transportation Statistics, Section 3.D - Government Finance.
Pages
- Public Private Partnership Legislation by State
- Revenue Allocated for Transportation Trends, Federal Government by Mode
- Revenue Allocated for Transportation Trends, State and Local Governments by Mode
- State Expenditures Allocated to Transportation
- Total Revenue Allocated for Transportation
- Transportation Expenditure by Mode, Federal (chained 2012 dollars)
- Transportation Expenditure by Mode, Federal (current dollars)
- Transportation Expenditure Trends, Federal Direct
- Transportation Expenditure Trends, State and Local Government Including Federal Transfers by Mode