Title: Lessons from Southern California Congestion Pricing Experiments
1Lessons from Southern California Congestion
Pricing Experiments
- David Brownstone
- University of California, Irvine
- (with Ken Small, Tom Golob,
- Arindam Ghosh, Jia Yan, Seiji Steimetz)
2SR 91 Toll Facility
- Privately funded 4 lanes in 8 miles of median in
congested link between Riverside and L.A. /
Orange County. - Complex fixed time-of-day and week pricing
schedule designed to maximize profit (revenue).
Current maximum toll is 8.25, but carpools get
50 discount. - Connects to much longer carpool lanes on both
sides of facility.
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4SR 91 Problems
- Politically very unpopular since private owners
enforced a no compete clause with the state
highway agency to prevent widening the free
lanes. - Private owners sold at a loss to local
transportation agency, which is now stuck with
paying off construction bonds.
5I-15 HOT lanes
- Publicly-funded 2 reversible lanes where solo
drivers can pay to use carpool lanes. - Links northern inland San Diego county to central
business district. - Real-time congestion pricing designed to keep
free-flow in HOT lanes. - Toll changes at most every 6 minutes, current
maximum about 4.00 - Changeable message signs give at least 30 seconds
notice of current toll charge.
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7I 15 Popularity
- I 15 toll facility is politically popular.
- Revenues fund an express bus system that
primarily serves domestic help for wealthy
residents. - I 15 corridor users are high-income (especially
compared to SR91) - I 15 toll facility being expanded 15 miles north.
8Toll Facility Commonalities
- Both use radio transponders to collect tolls,
which requires users to establish accounts. - Bypass very congested links on typically long
(30-40 minute) commutes. Maximum time savings is
about 10 minutes. - Use of toll facility is voluntary there is a
free alternative following exactly the same route.
9Questions
- Are these facilities better than just letting all
vehicles use the new lanes? - Are the charges set optimally?
- Do these toll facilities reduce vehicle
emissions? - Do these toll facilities increase safety?
- Can the answers to these questions be generalized
to other areas (Governor interested in converting
all carpool lanes to HOT lanes)
10Speed-Flow Curve
- Relates speed to traffic flow (the number of cars
per lane-hour) - As speeds increase, flow increases until
following distance starts to decrease below
drivers safety margin. (tailgating is good for
traffic flow!) - Speed-flow curve is reverse C shaped.
11Note that Fmax 1500-2000 cars per hour on a
freeway lane
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13Congestion
- Congestion occurs when enough vehicles enter the
road so that each additional vehicle lowers the
traffic flow. - This happens at the lower side of the speed-flow
curve.
14Optimal Congestion
- Occurs when the marginal benefit of reducing
congestion marginal cost of reducing
congestion. - Marginal cost is typically the cost of adding new
road capacity 5-10 million per lane-mile - Therefore optimal congestion is greater than zero.
15Too Much Congestion?
- Does private marginal benefit of reducing
congestion social marginal benefit? - No individuals do not account for the effect of
their deciding to take a trip on other travelers
trip times. - Therefore there is too much congestion.
16Solution Congestion Pricing
- Charge commuters entering congested roads an
amount equal to value of time (VOT) lost to all
other road users by their entering the road. - This will depend on the VOT of all other road
users, time and day, plus road conditions. - When road is not congested, the optimal
congestion toll is zero.
17Second Best Problems
- When there is a free alternative, then optimal
congestion toll is below VOT of other road users. - Due to increased congestion on free alternative.
18Congestion Pricing Not Popular
- Electricity especially residential
- Telephones
- Disneyland
- Grocery and other retail stores
- Differences in VOT suggest a market for premium
checkout lines
19Answers - Are these facilities better than just
letting all vehicles use the new lanes?
- Potentially yes since studies of commuters VOT
on these corridors find considerable variation
depending partially on income and length of trip.
20Are the charges set optimally?
- No, since both toll facilities set prices so that
toll lanes are flowing freely. Recall that due
to free alternative there should be some
congestion in toll lanes! - Setting optimal charges would be very hard to
sell politically.
21Do these toll facilities reduce vehicle
emissions?
- Slight reduction (about 5) relative to allowing
free use of the toll lanes, but this is mostly
due to setting tolls too high! - There would be essentially no emission reductions
with modern hybrid technology. - If comparison is made to original system, then
emissions are higher since toll facilities are
new capacity!
22Do these toll facilities increase safety?
- No, since free alternative is so congested that
it is hard to get in a serious accident. - The worst accidents are more frequent when road
is near capacity. This suggests that congestion
pricing may reduce safety, but not by a very
large amount.
23Can the answers to these questions be generalized
to other areas?
- Probably yes.
- Key VOT results are similar for both SR 91 and I
15 corridor in spite of large demographic
differences and different survey modes (mail
versus telephone). - Model fit on I 15 data can accurately predict SR
91 results.
24How Should Revenue be Used?
- Optimally should be used to reduce income taxes
(reduces labor market distortions). - Political feasibility seems to require recycling
back to corridor users. I 15 bus service lowers
cost of domestic help to same people paying
tolls! - Revenue will not be sufficient to build toll
lanes.
25Value of time
- Marginal Benefit of reducing congestion is the
value to road users of the time saved (VOT). - For commercial users this is typically the value
of time saved (wage) plus the inventory costs of
goods delayed in transit. - For work commute trips, VOT should be the
opportunity cost of time wage. - But majority of freeway trips are not work trips
or commercial trips.
26VOT for Commute Trips
- What is opportunity cost of commuting time?
- Work time?
- Home production?
- Leisure?
- VOT may not equal wage, and may vary across
people and trips.
27VOT Variability
- Unless VOT varies across commuters, things like
the 91 toll lanes cannot be efficient (because of
free alternative). - We would expect that VOT for work commute trips
increases with wage, but perhaps not linearly.
28How to Measure Commute VOT
- Revealed Preference infer from commuters
choices - Mode Choice (bus, walk, bike, car)
- Route choice (especially toll vs. free)
- Stated Preference ask commuters to respond to
hypothetical experiments where they can pay to
avoid congestion.
29Revealed Preference
- Reflects actual choice behavior but
- Very few situations where commuters can pay to
reduce travel time usually bundled with
something else like carpooling - Hard to measure time savings and cost for actual
trips since there is a lot of variability in most
commute trip times
30Stated Preference
- Example Suppose you could pay 10 to reduce the
time it took you to drive to school this morning
by 10 minutes. Would you take this option? __Yes
__No - Worse alternative How much would you pay to
reduce your trip time by 10 minutes? - Much cheaper than revealed preference studies.
31Stated Preference Problems
- Respondent may not understand question, or may
assume that the mechanism to reduce travel time
is bundled with something else. - Strategic Behavior respondent may lie to
influence public policy they may overstate VOT
to get more roads built - This may explain urban rail results
32Results from LA HOT lane studies
- Revealed preference from SR91 and I15 HOT lanes
finds VOT about 20/ hour of work commute trip
time saved. Varies with income and trip distance - Stated preference studies find VOT estimates
about 10/ hour
33Identification Issues
- Use floating car to measure time savings.
- Assume commuters know distribution of time
savings and toll level, but not actual time
savings. - SR91 variation in /time saved from fixed toll
schedule and carpool discount. I15 variation from
HOT bypass ramp at key congested intersection.
34I15 HOT Lane Time Savings
35 36 37SP/RP differences
- Difference persists across many different model
specifications and very different SP collection
methods (mail and CATI). - Respondents are familiar with electronic toll
collection and toll facilities. - Respondents systematically perceive twice the
actual time savings (more for women!).
38Safety
- HOT choice bundled with perceived increased
safety, and this might explain RP/SP differences - Actually safer on regular lanes (due to slow
speed) - Steimetz (2004) models extra effort to avoid
collisions in congested traffic, and finds this
only accounts for 33 of RP/SP differences
39Value of Reliability
- Commuters dont like uncertain travel time.
- Cost of being late higher than being early, so
measure uncertainty by 90th 50th percentile of
time savings distribution. - Reliability is closely correlated with signaling
function of real-time congestion tolls, so we
cant identify VOR from I15 data.
40 41VOR
- VOT accounts for 2/3 and VOR 1/3 of the service
quality differential between free and express
lanes on SR91. - Women have roughly twice the VOR as men, which
explains why women more likely to take toll roads
on both SR91 and I15.