Determinants of Motorization and Road Provision

G. Ingram, Zhi Liu
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引用次数: 149

Abstract

The authors survey past trends in vehicle ownership and road network expansion to analyze determinants of their growth at the national and urban level. Surprisingly, they find that: Nationally, income is a major determinant of both vehicle ownership and road length. Nationally, paved road length and vehicle ownership has been increasing about as fast as income, while total road length is increasing less rapidly than income. In urban areas vehicle ownership increases as fast as income, while total road length increases very slowly with income. Because national paved road networks are expanding about as fast as national motor vehicle fleets, national congestion is unlikely to be worsening. But because urban road length is growing more slowly than the number of urban motor vehicles, urban congestion is rising with income over time. Increased urban congestion is stimulating decentralized urban growth. Income elasticities are greater than price elasticities in absolute terms, for both vehicle ownership and use-an important finding because prices are often used as an instrument to control motor vehicle ownership and use. If price elasticities are half as large as income elasticities, pries would have to grow twice as fast as incomes to stabilize vehicle ownership. Breaking the link between income growth, rising congestion, and urban decentralization will be difficult: Restraining auto ownership in urban areas requires high tax rates, and increasing the supply of urban roads is costly. Elasticity estimates vary, but a good point estimate for the income elasticity of fleet growth is 1. This means country motor vehicle fleets grow in proportion to country incomes. More than half the world's annual increase in motor vehicles is likely to occur in high-income countries until 2025 (assuming GNP growth of 3 percent in high-income countries, 5 percent in low- and middle-income countries). The motor vehicle fleet is in low- and middle-income countries is not projected to exceed that in high-income countries until after 2050. Carbon dioxide emissions are likely to be distributed similarly.
机动化和道路供应的决定因素
作者调查了过去车辆拥有量和道路网络扩张的趋势,以分析其在国家和城市层面上增长的决定因素。令人惊讶的是,他们发现:在全国范围内,收入是车辆拥有量和道路长度的主要决定因素。在全国范围内,铺砌道路长度和车辆拥有量的增长速度与收入的增长速度差不多,而道路总长度的增长速度不及收入的增长速度。在城市地区,车辆拥有量的增长速度与收入的增长速度一样快,而道路总长度的增长速度与收入的增长速度非常慢。由于全国铺砌道路网络的扩张速度与全国机动车数量的增长速度差不多,因此全国交通拥堵不太可能恶化。但由于城市道路长度的增长速度慢于城市机动车数量的增长速度,随着时间的推移,城市拥堵随着收入的增加而加剧。城市拥堵加剧刺激了分散的城市发展。收入弹性在绝对意义上大于价格弹性,对于车辆所有权和使用来说都是如此——这是一个重要的发现,因为价格经常被用作控制汽车所有权和使用的工具。如果价格弹性是收入弹性的一半,那么价格增长速度必须是收入增长速度的两倍,才能稳定汽车保有量。打破收入增长、拥堵加剧和城市分权之间的联系将是困难的:抑制城市地区的汽车拥有量需要高税率,而增加城市道路的供应成本高昂。弹性估计值各不相同,但船队增长的收入弹性的一个好的点估计值是1。这意味着国家机动车辆数量的增长与国家收入成比例。到2025年,世界机动车年增长的一半以上可能发生在高收入国家(假设高收入国家的国民生产总值增长3%,低收入和中等收入国家的国民生产总值增长5%)。预计在2050年之前,低收入和中等收入国家的机动车辆数量不会超过高收入国家。二氧化碳排放量的分布也可能类似。
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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