Quantifying responses to changes in the jurisdiction of a congestion charge: A study of the London western extension

This paper quantifies behavioural responses to changes in the jurisdiction of a congestion charge, with a successive focus on (i) an extension and (ii) a reduction in the size of the charging zone. We exploit the unanticipated nature of both the implementation and removal of London’s Western Expansi...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2021-07, Vol.16 (7), p.e0253881-e0253881
Hauptverfasser: Ait Bihi Ouali, Laila, Musuuga, Davis, Graham, Daniel J
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description This paper quantifies behavioural responses to changes in the jurisdiction of a congestion charge, with a successive focus on (i) an extension and (ii) a reduction in the size of the charging zone. We exploit the unanticipated nature of both the implementation and removal of London’s Western Expansion Zone (WEZ) as quasi-natural experiments to test whether individual responses to policies are asymmetric. We use the UK Department of Transport Annual Average Daily Flow (AADF) data, which records traffic flows for seven transport modes (including cars, buses, bicycles, heavy and light goods vehicles). Using a difference-in-differences approach, we find that the introduction of the WEZ led to a 4.9% decline in road traffic flows in the new congestion charge area. These results are robust to different model specifications. HGVs traffic did not significantly change post-WEZ, which indicates that their road demand is price inelastic. The removal of the WEZ led to no significant variations in traffic. This result indicates asymmetry in behaviour with persistent changes in post-intervention traffic demand levels.
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subjects Asymmetry
Automobiles
Bicycles
Biology and Life Sciences
Buses (vehicles)
Engineering and Technology
Environmental aspects
Environmental engineering
Evaluation
Jurisdiction
Management
Medicine and Health Sciences
Physical Sciences
Social Sciences
Traffic congestion
Traffic flow
Traffic models
Vehicles
title Quantifying responses to changes in the jurisdiction of a congestion charge: A study of the London western extension
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