Title: Transport demand elasticities estimated by discrete choice models
1Transport demand elasticities estimated by
discrete choice models
- Brett SmithPhD StudentUWA
- PATREC Research Forum
- 19 September 2006
2Income
3Mode choice elasticities
- it is important to distinguish between
mode-choice and regular demand elasticities. - Mode-choice elasticities express the change in
demand given a fixed demand of traffic for all
modes. - They do not take into account the change in price
on the aggregated volume of traffic. - Mode choice elasticities are therefore a lower
limit to regular demand elasticities. - Nijkamp and Pepping 1998
4Subject Review
- Quandt 1968 (bi-modal)
- Taplin 1982 (general case)
- Oum et al (1992)
- Acutt and Dodgson (1996)
- Nijkamp et al (1998, 2000, 2002)
- Wardman (1997, 2002)
- Grahem and Glaister (2004)
- Dargy and Hanly (2000, 2004)
- Govt reports -- TRACE
5Literature Review Demand elasticities
- Reviews (fuel demand)
- Dargy and Hanly, Grahem and Glaister (2004)
- (fuel consumption) Long run -0.6 , short run -0.3
- Goodwin 1992
- (Fuel consumption) Long run -0.71, Short run
-0.27 - Disaggregate data and selection models
- Archibald and Gillingham (1981) Demand system
- -025 to -0.37
- Kayser (2000) single equation
- -0.24
- Public Transport
- Nijkamp and Pepping -0.4 to -0.6 (country of
study is a significant factor) - Wardman -0.4 to -0.6 (after 1990)
- Wardman and Shires 2003, Demand elasticities are
about 36 more elastic than choice elasticities
6Outline
- Motivation
- Context for theory
- Theory
- Mode choice studies as conditional demand systems
- Conditional demand systems from micro-economics
- Contrast between DCM and CDS
- Application
- Sydney Discrete choice model
- Estimating income elasticities from HHES
- Applying theory
- Discussion
7Response to pricing
- Long term
- Activity locations (travel patterns)
- Modal choices
- Change of vehicle
- Work choice
- Residential location
- Short term
- Mode switching
- Frequency of travel (add or remove activities)
- Trip chaining
- Activity locations
- Time of day
8Rational for activity based models
9Mode choice studies
- Policy directed
- Inclusion of a new service or mode
- Pricing policy
- Value of travel time savings
- Negotiations between Govt and private operators
- Behavioural outputs
- Welfare measurements
- Value of travel time savings
- Valuation of other modal attributes (willingness
to pay) - Elasticities
- Elasticities are used to determine the changes in
usage for each mode - Mode switching
- Other short term travel arrangements
- Summary elasticities from mode choice studies
are used to examine demand responses to price
movements in the transport system
10Demand What? and How Much?
Level of demand
Mode choice elasticities provide a description of
What? These models implicitly assume that the
other travel decisions are left unchanged. In a
sense the demand models are conditional
11Where are we now
- Motivation
- Context for theory
- Theory
- Mode choice studies as conditional demand systems
- Conditional demand systems from micro-economics
- Contrast between DCM and CDS
- Application
- Sydney Discrete choice model
- Estimating income elasticities from HHES
- Applying theory
- Discussion
12Multi Stage Budgeting
Utility tree diagram
Weak separability
13Utility Tree Development
- Leontief (1947) and Sono (1945)
- Cross price effects
- Strotz (1957)
- Two stage budgeting
- Gorman (1959) and Strotzs reply
- weak and strong (additive) separability
- Frisch (1959)
- Inferring price elasticities using want
independence (block additivity) - Pollak (1969, 1971)
- Conditional demand systems
- Substitution given a sub-budget
- Change in budget allocation
14Where are we now
- Motivation
- Context for theory
- Theory
- Mode choice studies as conditional demand systems
- Conditional demand systems from micro-economics
- Contrast between DCM and CDS
- Application
- Sydney Discrete choice model
- Estimating income elasticities from HHES
- Applying theory
- Discussion
15The difference between DCM and CDS
- DCM
- Derive utility from a trip (activity)
- If the price increases the utility derived from
the trip (activity) does not change, but you have
less money to spend elsewhere - McFaddens social welfare function (extend to
generalised costs) -
- CDS
- Derive utility from consumption of a bundle of
goods - If a price increases then the consumer needs to
manage with the same budget, all the loss in
utility is experienced in the consumption
activity (travel). - The utility of the pre-allocated good does not
change - Butclearly the consumer need not behave
according to either model they are free to
balance the changes in activity (travel) patterns
with the money left over for other things.
16Demand implications DCM and CDS
- DCM
- Demand for transport is fixed
- Implied elasticity of transport demand with
respect to price is zero - Implied income elasticity is zero
- Marginal share (percentage of additional dollar
allocated to transport) is zero - CDS
- Demand for all other expenditure is fixed
- Implied elasticity of transport demand with
respect to price is minus one - Implied marginal share is one
17Traditional conditional demand function
- conditional demand elasticity
- ordinary demand elasticity
- expenditure generation elasticity
18DCM conditional demand function
- conditional demand elasticity
- ordinary demand elasticity
- demand generation elasticity
19The second stage elasticity
20Second stage elasticity in words
- Separability is about the structure we are to
impose on our model what to investigate in
detail and what can be sketched in with broad
strokes without violation to the facts Gorman - The broad strokes
- If income is a constraint on choice then the
response to price will include an income effect - The magnitude of the price response depends on
the magnitude of the of the income elasticity
(eTm)
21Where are we now
- Motivation
- Context for theory
- Theory
- Mode choice studies as conditional demand systems
- Conditional demand systems from micro-economics
- Contrast between DCM and CDS
- Application
- Sydney Discrete choice model
- Estimating income elasticities from HHES
- Applying theory
- Discussion
22The Empirical Setting
- Combined RP/SP survey for Independent Pricing and
Regularity Tribunal (IPART) NSW to investigate
elasticities (Hensher and Raimond 1996) - Quota based sample to obtain reasonable numbers
of public transport users - On board sample for ferry users
- Collect data about current trip (RP)
- Present respondents with experimentally designed
pricing scenarios (SP)
23Pricing show card
24Household income distribution
Low lt30k Moderate 30k 90k High gt 90k
25Discrete choice model
- Segment the market in to low, middle and high
income - Include a cost squared term to detect a
decreasing marginal utility of money (M.U.M.)
Jara-diaz and Videla - Lower income are more price responsive (cost)
- Within income class, those who choose higher cost
alternatives have a lower M.U.M. (positive and
significant cost squared) - This effect is less apparent at higher income
classes (cost squared) - Heteroscedasity may confound these interpretations
26Results
27Results Discussion
- The marginal utility of income is lower for
higher income groups (cost term) - For each income class those who choose a higher
cost alternative have a lower MUM (cost squared
term). - Testing for heteroscedasity allowing for
increased variance of the unobserved utility did
not account for all the variation between income
classes (c23df 26, p-value lt0.001) - Correlation between unobserved component of
utility are fairly similar for each income group - Non-linear in income deterministic utility
functions improve fit (marginally) over linear
specification - The income effect is identified in models which
treat the 5 responses of each individual as a
single observation (mixed logit models). - Non-linear in time resource improves fit
remarkably
28Elasticities
29Where are we now
- Motivation
- Context for theory
- Theory
- Mode choice studies as conditional demand systems
- Conditional demand systems from micro-economics
- Contrast between DCM and CDS
- Application
- Sydney Discrete choice model
- Estimating income elasticities from HHES
- Applying theory
- Discussion
30Income
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32Literature Review
- Reviews (fuel demand)
- Dargy and Hanly, Grahem and Glaister (2004)
- Long run 0.8 , short run 0.4
- Disaggregate data and selection models
- Archibald and Gillingham (1981)
- 0.3 to 0.6
- Kayser (2000) selection model
- Fuel demand 0.5
- Nolan (2002) tobit regression
- Fuel 0.5, bus fare (0.7 no car, 0.1 with car)
- HHES Transport sector
- Bergantino (1998)
- Lower incomes gt 1, higher income 0.9
- Haque (2005) Aus. HHES 1998-1999
- Lowest income 1.6, highest income 0.7
- Demand Systems Aggregate data
- Selvanathan (1991)
- 1.4 for Australia and 1.5 NSW
33Transport out-of-pocket expenditure
- The model is a linear regression on a truncated
dependent variable - Travel expenditure gt 0
- P(Travel gt 0)
- Exp(Travel travel gt 0)
- It is clear that the variance is a function of
income so a generalised approach is adopted - Tobit regression with heteroscedacity (Greene
2004)
34Income Elasticity Engel Curves
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37Final model for income elasticity
38Where are we now
- Motivation
- Context for theory
- Theory
- Mode choice studies as conditional demand systems
- Conditional demand systems from micro-economics
- Contrast between DCM and CDS
- Application
- Sydney Discrete choice model
- Estimating income elasticities from HHES
- Applying theory
- Discussion
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40- Discussion
- Ordinary demand elasticities are more elastic
than choice elasticities - An aggregate travel demand response represents
the difference
41- Discussion
- The generation effect represents the other travel
changes made by individuals - Mode choice studies do not collect this data
- The method presented here considers why
individuals make these choices budgeting with
non-travel expenditure
42- Discussion
- The generation effect is greatest for car use
because the change in fuel price affects most
people - Bus and rail generation elasticities are
smallbut this does not mean people using those
modes are not adjusting travel demand any less - The method can be improved by taking into account
- Conditional income elasticities
- Vehicle ownership