The Gini index of demand imbalances in public transport

被引:0
|
作者
Daniel Hörcher
Daniel J. Graham
机构
[1] Imperial College London,
[2] Budapest University of Technology and Economics,undefined
来源
Transportation | 2021年 / 48卷
关键词
Public transport; Demand imbalances; Gini coefficient; Optimal pricing; Subsidies;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The paper studies a general bidirectional public transport line along which demand varies by line section. The length of line sections also varies, and therefore their contribution to aggregate (line-level) user and operational costs might be different, even if demand levels were uniform. The paper proposes the Gini index as a measure of demand imbalances in public transport. We run a series of numerical simulations with randomised demand patterns, and derive the socially optimal fare, frequency and vehicle size variables in each case. We show that the Gini coefficient is a surprisingly good predictor of all three attributes of optimal supply. These results remain robust with inelastic as well as elastic demand, at various levels of aggregate demand intensity. In addition, we find that lines facing severe demand imbalances generate higher operational cost and require more public subsidies under socially optimal supply, controlling for the scale of operations. The results shed light on the bias introduced by the assumption of homogeneous demand in several existing public transport models.
引用
收藏
页码:2521 / 2544
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Determining a public transport satisfaction index from user surveys
    del Castillo, J. M.
    Benitez, F. G.
    TRANSPORTMETRICA A-TRANSPORT SCIENCE, 2013, 9 (08) : 713 - 741
  • [32] Public transport equity with the concept of time-dependent accessibility using Geostatistics methods, Lorenz curves, and Gini coefficients
    Raza, Asif
    Akuh, Raymond
    Safdar, Muhammad
    Zhong, Ming
    CASE STUDIES ON TRANSPORT POLICY, 2023, 11
  • [33] Transfer demand prediction for timed transfer coordination in public transport operational control
    Kieu, Le Minh
    Bhaskar, Ashish
    Almeida, Paulo E. M.
    Sabar, Nasser R.
    Chung, Edward
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCED TRANSPORTATION, 2016, 50 (08) : 1972 - 1989
  • [34] Methodological approach to modelling potential demand of public transport using GIS techniques
    Alejandro Parras, Miguel
    Liliana Ramirez, Mirta
    REVISTA DE TRANSPORTE Y TERRITORIO, 2016, (14): : 109 - 121
  • [35] Spatial gaps in urban public transport supply and demand from the perspective of sustainability
    Chen, Yuan
    Bouferguene, Ahmed
    Li, Hong Xian
    Liu, Hexu
    Shen, Yinghua
    Al-Hussein, Mohamed
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2018, 195 : 1237 - 1248
  • [36] The demand for public transport: The effects of fares, quality of service, income and car ownership
    Paulley, Neil
    Balcombe, Richard
    Mackett, Roger
    Titheridge, Helena
    Preston, John
    Wardman, Mark
    Shires, Jeremy
    White, Peter
    TRANSPORT POLICY, 2006, 13 (04) : 295 - 306
  • [37] Subsidies in public transport
    van Goeverden, Cees
    Rietveld, Piet
    Koelemeijer, Jorine
    Peeters, Paul
    EUROPEAN TRANSPORT-TRASPORTI EUROPEI, 2006, (32): : 5 - 25
  • [38] An analysis of the determinants of local public transport demand focusing the effects of income changes
    Johan Holmgren
    European Transport Research Review, 2013, 5 : 101 - 107
  • [39] Does ride-sourcing absorb the demand for car and public transport in Amsterdam?
    Narayan, Jishnu
    Cats, Oded
    van Oort, Niels
    Hoogendoorn, Serge
    MT-ITS 2019: 2019 6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MODELS AND TECHNOLOGIES FOR INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS (MT-ITS), 2019,
  • [40] An analysis of the determinants of local public transport demand focusing the effects of income changes
    Holmgren, Johan
    EUROPEAN TRANSPORT RESEARCH REVIEW, 2013, 5 (02) : 101 - 107