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THE INTEGRATION OF ROAD PRICING WITH LAND USE PLANNING

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Title: THE INTEGRATION OF ROAD PRICING WITH LAND USE PLANNING


1
THE INTEGRATION OF ROAD PRICING WITH LAND USE
PLANNING
  • David Banister
  • University College London

Presentation for the IMPRINT Thematic Network
Workshop Brussels, May 2002
2
  • Context
  • EU White Paper on Transport Policy for a
    policy sustainable transport mobility
  • Fair and efficient pricing
  • Investment in transport infrastructure
  • Achievement of modal shift
  • Need also to push on other fronts such as land
    use and development and complementary macro
    economic policies to shift taxation towards
    consumption use of best available technology.

3
  • Role of Land Use Planning
  • Reduce journey lengths higher use of public
    transport and green modes of transport
  • Encourage trip chaining location of services
    and facilities in close proximity
  • Promoting high quality public transport
    interchanges that people want to spend time at
    with facilities transport development areas
  • Act in support of transport measures such as road
    pricing so that intentions match outcomes

4
  • Cordon Pricing in London
  • A unique opportunity to research some of these
    issues to reduce levels of car use in the
    central area and to raise revenue for investment
    in transport.

  • Equity
  • Acceptability
  • Boundary effects
  • Environmental benefits

5
  • Land Use Impacts of Congestion Pricing
  • Short Term Impacts variable in location and
    intensity.
  • Review of use and size of vehicles by businesses
    in the cordon area. Review by possible movers
    into cordon area.
  • For workers travel to work costs increase
    some still use their vehicles, others switch to
    public transport question of payments by
    employers
  • Other travellers, already mainly use public
    transport so little change
  • Suppliers will pay charge and pass it on to
    customers so some increases in prices

6
  • b) Longer term impacts land use and property
    changes need to understand the process of
    change and the theory of change
  • Commercial operations
  • Household and corporate activities
  • Factors of production

7
  • 5. The Arguments
  • The low cost of transport argument transport
    costs are a low part of total production costs
    and so road pricing will have little impact on
    firms decisions other factors such as
    availability of skilled labour, suitable sites,
    grants and environmental quality more important
    but effects may be felt at the margin
  • The geographic concentration argument
    production concentrates at locations with higher
    costs, but better access (Krugman, 1991). With
    sufficiently strong returns, all production is
    located at one point. For road pricing, the
    benefits from time savings must be greater than
    the costs imposed.

8
  • The economic theory argument benefits from a
    change in transport costs is reflected in the
    land market and in rent levels some businesses
    may choose to release increased capital value
    but transport change has to be related to other
    wider effects in the economy.
  • Monitoring is required for the land use and
    property markets difficulty of setting up
    causal linkages either conceptually or
    empirically need for dynamic analysis.
  • Monitoring is required for the housing market
    note that residents obtain a 90 reduction in
    charge. May encourage infill and higher density
    development, which in turn may reduce benefits.

9
  • City dynamics and the role of proximity how the
    different arguments and elements work in
    combination. Whether over the longer term, road
    pricing encourages concentration or dispersal of
    land uses.
  • Dispersal is already taking place in many cities
    benefits from agglomeration may be constant as
    the costs of transport increase (Kirwan, 2001).
  • If sustainable development is key, then policy
    should be directed at concentration the role of
    road pricing is unclear here.
  • McCann (1995) costs of overcoming distance
    (transaction and factor efficiency costs) and the
    costs of being located at one point in space
    (agglomeration economies)

10
  • Comments
  • Impacts of congestion charging in London must be
    seen as a small part of the dynamic of city
    development. The impact will be variable, by
    industry, location and time.
  • Possible impacts
  • Small changes in traffic depends on who will
    pay
  • Some reductions in congestion perhaps not
    measureable some increases in bus reliability
  • Little change expected in existing businesses
  • May be some disincentive for new businesses to
    locate in central London
  • May encourage higher value activities in the
    Centre
  • Little change in property and rental costs in the
    Centre
  • Most impacts likely on marginal businesses

11
  • 7. Research Requirements
  • Development of theoretical understanding through
    the theory of change
  • Monitoring of key indicators before, during and
    after implementation to include land values,
    property prices, rent levels, employment, and
    marginal users of Central London
  • Targeted case studies to establish detailed
    impacts on land use and development local level
    analysis
  • Monitor media and press coverage to determine
    public acceptability and help identify
    modifications
  • Systematic empirical data collection to provide
    input to economic and land use models to improve
    our understanding of the processes at work
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