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Applications of Simulation Travel Costs

Applications of Simulation Travel Costs. Scott Matthews Courses: 12-706 / 19-702. Admin Issues. No Friday class this week More on HW 4 – removing Q #17. Grade Range on Next Slide Need to specify take-home final plans Week of Dec 8-12, Two timeslots? #1: Morning of 8 th – 5pm on 10 th

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Applications of Simulation Travel Costs

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  1. Applications of SimulationTravel Costs Scott Matthews Courses: 12-706 / 19-702

  2. Admin Issues • No Friday class this week • More on HW 4 – removing Q #17. • Grade Range on Next Slide • Need to specify take-home final plans • Week of Dec 8-12, Two timeslots? • #1: Morning of 8th – 5pm on 10th • #2: Morning of 10th – 5pm on 12th 12-706 and 73-359

  3. HW 4 Grades • All raw scores above 74 -> 50/50 • All scores below 74, scaled as % of 74 • Minimum score: 15/50 • Average: 35/50 12-706 and 73-359

  4. @RISK tutorial/simulations • Look how to do overlays (put multiple distributions on one graph). • Incorporating correlations next week. 12-706 and 73-359

  5. Travel Costs • Time is a valuable commodity (time is $) • Arguably the most valuable • All about opportunity cost • Most major transportation/infrastructure projects built to ‘save travel costs’ • Need to tradeoff project costs with benefits • Ex: new highway that shortens commutes • Differences between ‘travel’ and ‘waiting’ • Waiting time disutility might be orders of magnitude higher than just ‘travel disutility’ • Why? Travelling itself might be fun 12-706 and 73-359

  6. Valuation: Travel Cost Method • Estimate economic use values associated with ecosystems or sites that are used for recreation • changes in access costs for a recreational site • elimination of an existing recreational site • addition of a new recreational site • changes in environmental quality • www.ecosystemvaluation.org/travel_costs.htm 12-706 and 73-359

  7. Travel Cost Method • Basic premise - time and travel cost expenses incurred to visit a site represent the “price” of access to the site.  • Thus, peoples’ WTP to visit the site can be estimated based on the number of trips that they make at different travel costs.  • This is analogous to estimating peoples’ WTP for a marketed good based on the quantity demanded at different prices. 12-706 and 73-359

  8. Example Case • A site used mainly for recreational fishing is threatened by development.  • Pollution and other impacts from this development could destroy the fish habitat • Resulting in a serious decline in, or total loss of, the site’s ability to provide recreational fishing services.  • Resource agency staff want to determine the value of programs or actions to protect fish habitat at the site. 12-706 and 73-359

  9. Why Use Travel Cost? • Site is primarily valuable to people as a recreational site.  There are no endangered species or other highly unique qualities that would make non-use values for the site significant. • The expenditures for projects to protect the site are relatively low.  Thus, using a relatively inexpensive method like travel cost makes the most sense. • Relatively simple compared to other methods 12-706 and 73-359

  10. Options for Method • A simple zonal travel cost approach, using mostly secondary data, with some simple data collected from visitors. • An individual travel cost approach, using a more detailed survey of visitors. • A random utility approach using survey and other data, and more complicated statistical techniques. 12-706 and 73-359

  11. Zonal Method • Simplest approach, estimates a value for recreational services of the site as a whole.  Cannot easily be used to value a change in quality of recreation for a site • Collect info. on number of visits to site from different distances.  Calculate number of visits “purchased” at different “prices.”  • Used to construct demand function  for site, estimate consumer surplus for recreational services of the site. 12-706 and 73-359

  12. Zonal Method Steps • 1. define set of zones around site.  May be defined by concentric circles around the site, or by geographic divisions, such as metropolitan areas or counties surrounding the site • 2. collect info. on number of visitors from each zone, and the number of visits made in the last year.  • 3. calculate the visitation rates per 1000 population in each zone.  This is simply the total visits per year from the zone, divided by the zone’s population in thousands.  12-706 and 73-359

  13. Sample Data 12-706 and 73-359

  14. Estimating Costs • 4. calculate average round-trip travel distance and travel time to site for each zone.  • Assume Zone 0 has zero travel distance and time.  • Use average cost per mile and per hour of travel time, to calculate travel cost per trip.  • Standard cost per mile is $0.30.  The cost of time is from average hourly wage.  • Assume that it is $9/hour, or $.15/minute, for all zones, although in practice it is likely to differ by zone.  12-706 and 73-359

  15. Data 5. Use regression to find relationship between visits and travel costs, e.g. Visits/1000 = 330 – 7.755*(Travel Cost) “a proxy for demand given the information we have” 12-706 and 73-359

  16. Final steps • 6. construct estimated demand for visits with regression. First point on demand curve is total visitors to site at current costs (with no entry fee), which is 1600 visits.  Other points by estimating number of visitors with different hypothetical entrance fees (assuming that an entrance fee is valued same as travel costs). Start with $10 entrance fee.  Plugging this into the estimated regression equation, V = 330 – 7.755C: 12-706 and 73-359

  17. Demand curve • This gives the second point on the demand curve—954 visits at an entry fee of $10.  In the same way, the number of visits for increasing entry fees can be calculated: 12-706 and 73-359

  18. Graph Consumer surplus = area under demand curve = benefits from recreational uses of site around $23,000 per year, or around $14.38 per visit ($23,000/1,600).  Agency’s objective was to decide feasibility to spend money to protect this site.  If actions cost less than $23,000 per year, the cost will be less than the benefits provided by the site. 12-706 and 73-359

  19. Recreation Benefits • Value of recreation studies • ‘Values per trip’ -> ‘value per activity day’ • Activity day results (Sorg and Loomis 84) • Sport fishing: $25-$100, hunting $20-$130 • Camping $5-$25, Skiing $25, Boating $6-$40 • Wilderness recreation $13-$75 • Are there issues behind these results? 12-706 and 73-359

  20. Value of travel time savings • Many studies seek to estimate VTTS • Can then be used easily in CBAs • Waters, 1993 (56 studies) • Many different methods used in studies • Route, speed, mode, location choices • Results as % of hourly wages not a $ amount • Mean value of 48% of wage rate (median 40) • North America: 59%/42% • Good resource for studies like this: www.vtpi.org 12-706 and 73-359

  21. Government Analyses • DOT (1997): Use % of wage rates for local/intercity and personal/business travel • These are the values we will use in class 12-706 and 73-359 Office of Secretary of Transportation, “Guidance for the Valuation of Travel Time in Economic Analysis”, US DOT, April 1997.

  22. In-and-out of vehicle time 12-706 and 73-359

  23. Income and VTTS • Income levels are important themselves • VTTS not purely proportional to income • Waters suggests ‘square root’ relation • E.g. if income increases factor 4, VTTS by 2 12-706 and 73-359

  24. Introduction - Congestion • Congestion (i.e. highway traffic) has impacts on movement of people & goods • Leads to increased travel time and fuel costs • Long commutes -> stress -> quality of life • Impacts freight costs (higher labor costs) and thus increases costs of goods & services • http://mobility.tamu.edu/ 12-706 and 73-359

  25. Literature Review • Texas Transportation Institute’s 2005 Annual Mobility Report • http://tti.tamu.edu/documents/mobility_report_2005.pdf • 20-year study to assess costs of congestion • Average daily traffic volumes • Binary congestion values • ‘Congested’ roads assumed both ways • Assumed 5% trucks all times/all roads • Assumed 1.25 persons/vehicle, $12/hour • Assumed roadway sizes for 3 classes of roads • Four different peak hour speeds (both ways) 12-706 and 73-359

  26. Results • An admirable study at the national level • In 2003, congestion cost U.S. 3.7 billion hours of delay, 2.3 billion gallons of wasted fuel, thus $63 billion of total cost 12-706 and 73-359

  27. Long-term effects (Tufte?) Uncongested 33% Severe 20% Heavy 14% 12-706 and 73-359

  28. Old / Previous Results • Method changed over time.. • In 1997, congestion cost U.S. 4.3 billion hours of delay, 6.6 billion gallons of wasted fuel, thus $72 billion of total cost • New Jersey wanted to validate results with its own data 12-706 and 73-359

  29. New Jersey Method • Used New Jersey Congestion Management System (NJCMS) - 21 counties total • Hourly data! Much more info. than TTI report • For 4,000 two-direction links • Freeways principal arteries, other arteries • Detailed data on truck volumes • Average vehicle occupancy data per county, per roadway type • Detailed data on individual road sizes, etc. 12-706 and 73-359

  30. Level of Service • Description of traffic flow (A-F) • A is best, F is worst (A-C ‘ok’, D-F not) • Peak hour travel speeds calculated • Compared to ‘free flow’ speeds • A-C classes not considered as congested • D-F congestion estimated by free-peak speed • All attempts to make specific findings on New Jersey compared to national • http://www.njit.edu/Home/congestion/ 12-706 and 73-359

  31. Definitions • Roadway Congestion Index - cars per road space, measures vehicle density • Found per urban area (compared to avgs) • > 1.0 undesirable • Travel Rate Index • Amount of extra time needed on a road peak vs. off-peak (e.g. 1.20 = 20% more) 12-706 and 73-359

  32. Definitions (cont.) • Travel Delay - time difference between actual time and ‘zero volume’ travel time • Congestion Cost - delay and fuel costs • Fuel assumed at $1.28 per gallon • VTTS - used wage by county (100%) • Also, truck delays $2.65/mile (same as TTI) • Congestion cost per licensed driver • Took results divided by licenses • Assumed 69.2% of all residents each county 12-706 and 73-359

  33. Details • County wages $10.83-$23.20 per hour • Found RCI for each roadway link in NJ • Aggregated by class for each county 12-706 and 73-359

  34. New York City RCI result: Northern counties generally higher than southern counties 12-706 and 73-359

  35. TRI result: Northern counties generally higher than southern counties 12-706 and 73-359

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  37. Avg annual Delay = 34 hours! Almost a work Week! 12-706 and 73-359

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  39. Effects • Could find annual hours of delay per driver by aggregating roadway delays • Then dividing by number of drivers • Total annual congestion cost $4.9 B • Over 5% of total of TTI study • 75% for autos (190 M hours, $0.5 B fuel cost) • 25% for trucks (inc. labor/operating cost) • Avg annual delay per driver = 34 hours 12-706 and 73-359

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  41. Future • Predicted to only get worse • Congestion costs will double by 2015 • Why? We spend money on construction 12-706 and 73-359

  42. Utility • Recall: eliciting and using individual utility functions to make decisions • Is there a similar concept to help us make decisions at the social level?

  43. Specifics on Saving Lives • Cost-Utility Analysis • Quantity and quality of lives important • Just like discounting, lives are not equal • Back to the developing/developed example • But also: YEARS are not equal • Young lives “more important” than old • Cutting short a year of life for us vs • Cutting short a year of life for 85-year-old • Often look at ‘life years’ rather than ‘lives’ saved.. These values also get discounted

  44. Measuring Lives Saved • Life years (prevented fatalities) not equal • Qualitative and quantitative issue • Need to consider tradeoffs • Simple example • Status quo: no newborns survive a condition • Alt. A: 5 live, but with permanent disability • Alt. B: 2 live, but with low levels of disability • Which option (SQ, A, B) is preferable? • Assume Y increasing, H increasing • Equal costs, no relevant uncertainty

  45. Simple Example

  46. The Quality/Quantity Game • Assume “preference” for • Increased number of years lived • Increased level of health • Would your preferences be the same? • If so, SQ “dominated” by both A and B • Note different horizontal/vertical preference • But which of A or B is better? • We all understand difference in years • Need an index of health status

  47. Health Status Index Death Severely Disabled Moderately Disabled Minimally Disabled Health • Measures utility, derived from experts • But this says nothing about tradeoff! • Can perform tradeoff survey • Value of “shorter Y, higher H” vs. opposite 0 0.15 0.47 0.92 1

  48. Methods • Health Rating method (see above) • Time tradeoff method • Standard gamble method • Discounting life years • Can/should we discount them? • Unlike cash values, we can’t make a decision to trade 1 year today for 10 yrs from now

  49. Cost-Effectiveness Testing • Generally, use when: • Considering externality effects or damages • Could be environmental, safety, etc. • Benefits able to be reduced to one dimension • Alternatives give same result - e.g. ‘reduced x’ • Benefit-Cost Analysis otherwise difficult/impossible • Instead of finding NB, find “cheapest” • Want greatest bang for the buck • Find cost “per unit benefit” (e.g. lives saved) • Allows us to NOT include ‘social costs’

  50. Why CEA instead of CBA? • Similar to comments on MCDM • Constraints may limit ability to perform • Monetizing maybe difficult or controversial • Easy to find lives saved, hard to judge value • Monetizing can’t capture total social value or distorts its value

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