Now the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, is proposing free public transport too.
From The Local:
Paris to examine making public transport free for everyonePhoto: AFP
@thelocalfrance 20 March 2018
Could Paris take the revolutionary step of making public transport completely free for all residents of the capital? The mayor is looking into the idea.
One way to stop people jumping the barriers at Metro stations around Paris is to remove the barriers altogether.
It sounds outlandish for a capital city to make public transport free but Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo announced on Monday that she had commissioned a study to look into the possibility.
But could Paris really afford to let its 2.25 million residents travel on buses, trams, the Metro and RER for free by the year 2020?
Hidalgo said the radical move would only be done if it was economically viable and admitted that "today, there's nothing to say that it would be possible."
One problem for Socialist mayor Hidalgo (pictured centre below) is that Paris transport costs are the responsibility of the organisation Île-de-France Mobilites, which is chaired by Valerie Pecresse, the right wing president of the greater Paris region of Île-de-France. The pair rarely see eye to eye.
Transport users in Paris contribute some €3.8 billion to the Île-de-France region's coffers.
Nevertheless she wants to investigate the possibility of making transport free a reality by 2020, which is when she faces new elections.
Note that fares cover 28% of the region's transport costs, so as elsewhere it's not such a big step to zero. Also, while the over-65 free Navigo pass is means tested, obviously it too is heavily subsidised when paid for. On the other hand, the "lots of spare capacity" argument used in smaller towns might not ring quite so true to Parisians.
PS: Yes, that is the prime minister for some reason, not madame la maire.