To Pool or Not to Pool: Equilibrium, Pricing and Regulation

Kenan Zhang, Marco Nie
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引用次数: 50

Abstract

Abstract We study a transportation network company (TNC) that offers on-demand solo and pooling e-hail services in an aggregate mobility service market, while competing with transit for passengers. The market equilibrium is established based on a spatial driver–passenger matching model that determines the passenger wait time for both solo and pooling rides. We prove, under mild conditions, this system always has an equilibrium solution. Built on the market equilibrium, three variants of pricing problems are analyzed and compared, namely, (i) profit maximization, (ii) profit maximization subject to regulatory constraints, and (iii) social welfare maximization subject to a revenue-neutral constraint. A comprehensive case study is constructed using TNC data collected in the city of Chicago. We found pooling is desirable when demand is high but supply is scarce. However, its benefit diminishes quickly as the average en-route detour time (i.e., the difference between the average duration of solo and pooling trips) increases. Without regulations, a mixed strategy—providing both solo and pooling rides—not only achieves the highest profit and trip production in most scenarios, but also gains higher social welfare. The minimum wage policy can improve social welfare in the short term. However, in the long run, the TNC could react by limiting the size of the driver pool, and consequently, render the policy counterproductive, even pushing social welfare below the unregulated level. Moreover, by maintaining the supply and demand of ride-hail at an artificially high level, the minimum wage policy tends to exacerbate traffic congestion by depressing the use of collective modes (transit and pooling). A congestion tax policy that penalizes solo rides promotes pooling, but may harm social welfare. However, it promises to increase both social welfare and pooling ratio when jointly implemented with the minimum wage policy.
合用或不合用:均衡、定价与管制
摘要本文研究了一家交通网络公司(TNC),该公司在总体移动服务市场中提供按需单人和共享电子叫车服务,同时与公交公司争夺乘客。市场均衡建立在空间司机-乘客匹配模型的基础上,该模型确定了单独乘车和拼车的乘客等待时间。证明了在温和条件下,该系统总是有一个平衡解。在市场均衡的基础上,分析比较了定价问题的三种变体,即(i)利润最大化、(ii)监管约束下的利润最大化和(iii)收入中性约束下的社会福利最大化。本文利用跨国公司在芝加哥市收集的数据构建了一个全面的案例研究。我们发现,当需求高但供应稀缺时,池化是可取的。然而,随着平均绕行时间(即单独旅行和合用旅行的平均持续时间之间的差异)的增加,它的好处会迅速减少。在没有监管的情况下,提供单人和拼车的混合策略不仅在大多数情况下实现了最高的利润和出行量,而且还获得了更高的社会福利。最低工资政策可以在短期内改善社会福利。然而,从长远来看,跨国公司可以通过限制司机池的规模来做出反应,从而使政策适得其反,甚至将社会福利推到不受管制的水平以下。此外,通过将网约车的供给和需求维持在人为的高水平,最低工资政策往往会抑制集体模式(公交和拼车)的使用,从而加剧交通拥堵。惩罚单人乘车的拥堵税政策促进了拼车,但可能损害社会福利。但是,它承诺,如果与最低工资政策共同实施,将增加社会福利和统筹比例。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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