Road pricing : theory and evidence
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Road pricing : theory and evidence
(Research in transportation economics : a research annual / edited by Theodore E.Keeler, v. 9)
Elsevier/JAI, 2004
Available at 20 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Traffic congestion affects towns and cities everywhere and in some places it is regarded as one of the most urgent and important problems in need of a solution. Road pricing is undoubtedly recognised as an effective traffic demand management tool. The recent London congestion charging scheme seems to be showing that public and political opposition is not insurmountable. Thus, the ghost that prevented the introduction of a policy supported by transport economists for over 80 years seems to have disappeared or at least, weakened.The book contains twelve papers useful to different types of audience, such as researchers and postgraduate students, civil servants, policy makers and consultants. The first part is mainly theoretical and concentrates on second-best congestion pricing including pricing in urban contexts, the impact on the performance of the road network, optimal locations and charge levels, dynamic aspects such as time variation of tolls, potential impacts of road pricing on costs and service quality of public transport buses, and efficiency costs and transport sector effects of different types of pricing when they guarantee a balanced budget per mode.The second part contains chapters that describe the schemes in place around the world such as Singapore, Norway, London, and the US. The volume is an update of the state of the art on the subject and the first one to have been written and appear after the London scheme was implemented and to contain an assessment of its preliminary impacts.
Table of Contents
Theory. The Rationale for Road Pricing: Standard Theory and Latest Advances. Second-Best Marginal Cost Pricing for Imperfect Substitutes in Urban Networks. The Impact on Network Performance of Drivers' Response to Alternative Road Pricing Schemes. Optimal Locations and Charges for Cordon Schemes. Time-Varying Road Pricing and Choice of Toll Locations. Road Pricing and Public Transport.Marginal Social Cost Pricing for all Transport Modes and the Effects of Modal Budget Constraints. Evidence. Transport Policies in Singapore.Norwegian Urban Tolls. Road Pricing in the UK. The US Experience: Pilot Projects. Welfare and Distributional Effects of Road Pricing Schemes for Metropolitan Washington DC.
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