Pareto-improving policies for an idealized two-zone city served by two congestible modes

Time:2020-09-28 Views:

Authors:Xu Shu-Xian, Liu Ronghui, Liu Tian-Liang, Huang Hai-Jun

Published in:Transportation Research Part B: Methodological

Abstract:We study urban structure and traffic congestion of a monocentric city by idealizing its suburb and its core as two zones and then exploring what would happen when they are connected by a congestible highway and a crowded railway system. We introduce dynamic congestion effect into commuters’ departure-time and mode choice behaviours, and analyse the endogenous interactions between their travel and residential relocation choices. Studies ignoring dynamic departure-time behaviour show an ambiguous effect of transit improvements to the city. However, we find that transit improvement has a definitive impact on city structure: it increases the residents’ equilibrium utility, at a cost of increased suburb land use. We show that it is possible to design Pareto-improving land-use and transit policies which benefit the residents without causing urban sprawl. We provide analytically the existence conditions of such policies and suggest that a high return of land use tax to subsidize transit improvements is required.

Keywords:Monocentric city model;Dynamic congestion;Land use tax;Transit subsidy;Urban sprawl;Pareto improving

Author:

Research Interests: Travel behavior anaysis, transportation economics, production & service operations management, logistics optimization & supply chain management

 

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