When are urban growth boundaries not second-best policies to congestion tolls?

Pines and Sadka proved that a not-too-stringent urban growth boundary is a second-best policy to congestion tolls when traffic congestion is unpriced, by assuming that all jobs are exogenously located at one urban center (monocentric city) [D. Pines, E. Sadka, Zoning, first-best, second-best and thi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of urban economics 2007-03, Vol.61 (2), p.263-286
Hauptverfasser: Anas, Alex, Rhee, Hyok-Joo
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description Pines and Sadka proved that a not-too-stringent urban growth boundary is a second-best policy to congestion tolls when traffic congestion is unpriced, by assuming that all jobs are exogenously located at one urban center (monocentric city) [D. Pines, E. Sadka, Zoning, first-best, second-best and third-best criteria for allocating land to roads, Journal of Urban Economics 17 (1985) 167–183]. The result is also implied by Kanemoto [Y. Kanemoto, Cost-benefit analysis and the second-best land use for transportation, Journal of Urban Economics 4 (1977) 483–503] and Arnott [R. Arnott, Unpriced transport congestion, Journal of Economic Theory 21 (1979) 294–316]. Brueckner extrapolated this narrow theoretical result to real cities [J. Brueckner, Urban sprawl: Diagnosis and remedies, International Regional Science Review 23 (2000) 160–179]. We show that if there is no cross-commuting between city and suburb, first-best efficient tolls on traffic can reduce congestion and total travel cost by shifting worker-residents from the city to the suburbs, causing urban expansion. Then, planned urban boundaries of any stringency are not a second-best policy because they induce people to relocate to more congested areas. With cross-commuting, boundaries of any stringency can be inefficient even when tolls shrink cities, as boundaries do little but tolls do a lot to reduce inefficient suburb-to-city commuting. We also show that when the urban radius is limited by a natural boundary, then growth boundaries of any stringency are inefficient.
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subjects Boundaries
Commuting
Congestion
Cost reduction
Efficiency
Growth rate
Studies
Tolls
Traffic congestion
Traffic congestion tolls
Transport
Urban areas
Urban development
Urban growth boundaries
Urban planning
Urban sprawl
title When are urban growth boundaries not second-best policies to congestion tolls?
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