Title: Externalities on highways
1Externalities on highways
- Today We apply externalities to a real-life
example
2Today
- A real-life example with externalities
- Automobile congestion
- We can use some economic tools to analyze the
situation - Equilibrium
- Market failure
3Congestion
- We will look at possible solutions to the problem
- Tolls on congested routes
- Building our way out of congestion
- HOV lanes
- Private highways and express lanes
- Monopoly power?
- Public transit and city design
4Traveling from A to B
- Choose between a highway and a bridge in each of
the 4 rounds
5Recall information from previous activity
- Travel time on the highway is 20 minutes, no
matter how many other cars travel on this route - The bridge is narrow, and so travel time is
dependent on the number of other cars on the
bridge - If 1 car is on the bridge, travel time is 10
minutes 2 cars, 11 minutes 3 cars, 12 minutes
etc.
6Implementation of tolls
- Each minute of time is worth a dollar for each
person in your carpool - In other words, for each additional minute of
travel time, you pay a 1 marginal cost due to
your lost time - Each time you travel the bridge, each person in
your carpool must pay a 5 toll
7Route choice and externalities
- Earlier this quarter, we used an activity to show
that there is equilibrium on this route network
w/o tolls 11 carpools on the bridge - However, there are externalities involved
whenever an additional carpool travels on the
bridge
8Why charging a toll is useful
- W/o tolls, the bridge and highway have the same
travel times in equilibrium - Take away the bridge and nobodys travel time
changes ? No social value to the bridge - With tolls, some people can have shorter travel
times
9Arent tolls costs too?
- If bridge tolls go to government, these are just
transfers of money - Toll revenue can offset tax money that has to be
collected - Remember that taxes have DWL, except in a case
like this where externalities are present - In this case, an optimal tax can reduce DWL
10Equilibrium with tolls
- Each minute is 1 in time costs (per person)
- Cost to travel on HW ? 20
- Cost to travel on bridge ? time cost 5
- What is equilibrium?
- Each person on the bridge has 15 in time cost ?
travel time of 15 minutes ? 6 carpools on the
bridge
11In the following analysis
- we assume 1 person per car
- This is so that we can more simply determine
efficiency - we assume 20 cars that must travel from A to B
12Efficiency Lowest total minutes for all drivers
on bridge Travel time on bridge Total minutes for bridge travelers Total minutes for highway travelers Total minutes for all drivers
1 10 10 380 390
2 11 22 360 382
3 12 36 340 376
4 13 52 320 372
5 14 70 300 370
6 15 90 280 370
7 16 112 260 372
8 17 136 240 376
9 18 162 220 382
10 19 190 200 390
11 20 220 180 400
13What is efficient?5 or 6 on bridge
on bridge Travel time on bridge Total minutes for bridge travelers Total minutes for highway travelers Total minutes for all drivers
1 10 10 380 390
2 11 22 360 382
3 12 36 340 376
4 13 52 320 372
5 14 70 300 370
6 15 90 280 370
7 16 112 260 372
8 17 136 240 376
9 18 162 220 382
10 19 190 200 390
11 20 220 180 400
14Applying our problem to real traffic problems
- Los Angeles metro area
- Some refer many of these freeways to be parking
lots during rush hours
15What are some potential ways to solve this
problem?
- Some people believe that we can build our way out
of congestion - Lets examine this problem in the context of our
activity
16Suppose our activity from week 1
- No tolls
- Bridge travel time is 9 T, where T represents
the number of bridge travelers - Equilibrium T 11, 20 minute travel times for
all
17Increased capacity on bridge
- New technology leads to bridge travel time at 9
0.733T - Equilibrium T 15, 20 minute travel times for
all
18What happens with increased bridge capacity?
- Increased capacity leads more people to travel on
the bridge - This is known as increasing bridge capacity
creating its own demand
19In the real world
- Increasing freeway capacity creates its own
demand - Some people traveling during non-rush hour
periods will travel during rush hour after a
freeway is expanded - Freeway expansion often costs billions of dollars
to be effective during peak travel periods
20HOV lanes
- HOV lanes attempt to increase the number of
people traveling on each lane (per hour) - These attempts have limited success
- Benefit of carpool Decreased travel time
- Cost of carpool Coordination issues
- Problem Most big cities on the west coast are
built horizontally ? sprawl
21Private highways
- Look at a short video on LA traffic
- WARNING This video is produced by reason.tv, an
organization that advertises Free minds and free
markets - After the video
- I would like your thoughts about whether or not
you believe the suggestions in the video will
help solve our commuting problems - We will discuss benefits and costs about private
highways
22Some references in the video
Highway 405 Often one of the busier freeways in
the LA metro area
Highway 91 Express Lanes Part success, part
failure
23Why could private highways be successful?
- Uses prices to control congestion
- Private financing would prevent tax money from
having to be used - More private highways would decrease demand for
free roads
24Potential problems for private highways
- Monopoly power
- Positive economic profits if not regulated
- Clauses against increasing capacity on parallel
routes - Loss of space for expansion of free lanes
- Contracts are often long (30-99 years)
- Private highways are often built in places with
low demand - Tollways in Orange County
25Possible solution Public control over priced
highways
- This is what happened on the 91 Express Lanes in
Orange County (eventually) - Privately built
- Monopoly problems
- Public buy-out of the privately-built lanes
- With public control, more carpooling has been
encouraged
26Benefits of public control of priced highways
- Gasoline taxes can be reduced in congested areas
to offset congestion pricing - Pricing increases efficiency, unlike taxes
- Non-commuting traffic has an economic incentive
to travel during times of little or no congestion - Trips with little economic value can be avoided
- Remember With externalities, these trips have
Social MB lt Social MC
2791 Express Lanes toll schedule
10 toll going eastbound on Fridays, 3 pm hour
28Public transit and city design
- People often hope that public transit is the
solution - However, many people hope that someone else
takes public transit - Why? Slow, inconvenient, lack of privacy
- Public transit can only be a long-term solution
if it is faster and less costly than driving
29Public transit and city design
- City designs usually make public transit
difficult for many people to use effectively - Sprawl leads to people originating travel in many
different places - Express buses are difficult to implement
- Local buses are slow, used mostly by people with
low value of time
30Public transit and city design
- City planners can make public transit more
desirable - Increased population density near public transit
- Areas with big workplace density, especially near
bus routes and rail lines - Designated bus lanes to make bus travel faster
than driving solo
31Public transit and city design
- The problem with these potential solutions
- People in these cities want their single family
homes, low density neighborhoods - People value privacy highly
- This leads to the externality problems of
congestion
32Summary
- Congestion is a big economic problem in the US,
due to the externalities involved - There are many possible solutions
- Each has its advantages and disadvantages