Is the equity value of time really fair

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Presentation by Guoqing Zhang & James Laird at the Scottish Transport Applications & Research (STAR) Conference 2014. www.starconference.org.uk www.its.leeds.ac.uk/people/j.laird

Transcript of Is the equity value of time really fair

Institute for Transport StudiesFACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT

Is the equity value of time really fair?

STAR Conference, Glasgow, 2014

Guoqing Zhang

GuoQing.Zhang@WSPGroup.com.cn

James Laird

J.J.Laird@its.leeds.ac.uk

Structure

• Part 1: Motivation

• Part 2: Research objectives

• Part 3:Methodology

• Part 4: Synthetic analysis

• Part 5: Scottish case studies

• Part 6: Conclusions

Motivation

• A key element of benefit from transport infrastructure improvements is travel time savings

• The value travellers attribute to travel time savings is dependent on a number of variables – but principally income and distance

• Equity values of VTTS are used in the Cost Benefit Analysis (CBA) as they are regarded as fair – preventing investment concentrating in high income areas– But equity VoT may lead to a distortion in investment

– Money might be invested in a high cost scheme when people would prefer a low cost

Research objectives

• What is the economic impact of using ‘local’ value of time savings in appraisal?

• What is the implied distributional weights from using a equity VoT?

- Are such weights appropriate?

- Do they vary by scheme?

• What are the challenges associated with using local VoT in an appraisal?

Methodology --- a two stage method

• Stage 1: Synthetic analysis

- Deriving household income

- Deriving trip length

- Deriving VTTS values per trip

- Calculating the user benefit

- Estimating distributional weights

• Stage 2: Scottish case studies

- Deriving household income

- Use demand, trip distance, journey times from Transport Scotland

- Deriving VTTS values per trip

- Calculating the user benefit

- Estimating distributional weights

Synthetic analysis

Equation used to update the VoTs into 2010 prices

VoTs for commuting purpose in 2010 price

VoTs for other non-work purpose in 2010 price

Synthetic analysis

Non-work VTTS lookup table

Synthetic analysis --- Household income fitting

• Seven areas• Distributions fitted to income data from Family Resources

Survey• E.g. Scotland

Synthetic analysis

Scenario1: Fixed trip distance of 10 miles with non-work journey purpose, and every household only produces one trip enjoying 10 minutes’ reduction (10,000 households )

Scenario 2: trip distance varying with non-work journey purpose and 10 minutes’ saving per trip for each household (10,000 households )

Case studies

Analysis of Scheme 1

Analysis of Scheme 2

Case studies

Distributional Weights for scheme1

Distributional Weights for scheme2

Conclusions

• There is a spatial bias with the equity value of time, towards urban schemes

• Distance effects are more important than income effects– User benefits of one of the case studies increased by 24%;

– User benefits of the second scheme went from negative to positive.

• Implied distributional weights of the equity value of time vary– Introduces an inconsistency

• Further research– Expansion of analysis to more trip purposes and schemes;

– Uncertainty in estimating income. Explore using GIS data (e.g. census data).

Thank you for your attention.

Any questions?