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Identifying the wider benefits of transport investments. Roger Vickerman Centre for European, Regional and Transport Economics University of Kent, Canterbury, UK. XREAP Symposium, Barcelona, 26 November 2010. Introduction and motivation.
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Identifying the wider benefits of transport investments Roger Vickerman Centre for European, Regional and Transport Economics University of Kent, Canterbury, UK XREAP Symposium, Barcelona, 26 November 2010
Introduction and motivation • Transport as a determinant of land use and economic development (wider economic benefits -WEB) the subject of much controversy • Formal appraisal techniques tend either • to exclude the possibility of wider economic impacts because of the fear of double counting • or simply include an arbitrary add on • Recent work has improved our understanding of the way in which accessibility • affects the performance of firms, • labour markets.
Introduction and motivation • However, the empirical evidence remains problematic • endogeneity and causality questions • conflicts between macro-and micro-based estimates • the interrelationship and spillovers between different areas • This has policy implications: • underinvestment in transport infrastructure could lead to • lower growth • congestion • overinvestment could lead to • problems for public budgets • negative externalities associated with over expansion.
Transport and the local economy • The multiple nature of transport • Transport as a derived demand • Transport as a substitutable input • Transport as an engine of growth • Transport infrastructure and accessibility • External accessibility and the ‘two-way’ road • Internal accessibility and efficiency • Accessibility, the cost of transport and economic efficiency • User benefits and the wider economic benefits of transport
The agglomeration issue • ‘New Economic Geography’ provides the necessary linkages • Transport costs as determinant of the price of an urban location • And hence of the real wage • Thus going beyond the simple value of time savings as a transport benefit • The theoretical basis of agglomeration • Increasing returns, transport costs and market size • Linkages in the local economy • The role of real wages in cumulative causation • Labour market impacts • Is agglomeration universal and inevitable?
Labour market impacts • Removal of barriers - integration of labour markets • Agglomeration benefits in labour markets • Changing participation rates • Increased working hours • Moves to more productive jobs - increased size of commuting area has impacts on productivity and wage differentials • Dangers of transferring parameters • Between modes • Between cities • Does analysis of effects on individual city regions work for inter-city connections?
City size and agglomeration benefits Costs/ Benefits C1 C0 W (= wage gap) B1 δ β′ B0 β Transport costs fall C0 to C1 No agglomeration economies: Wage gap unchanged at B0 LM size increases to L1’ Net Benefits = α+β α γ γ′ Agglomeration economies: Wage gap increases to B1 LM size increases to L1 Net Benefits = α+(β+β′)+δ L0 L1 Labour market size L1′ After Venables (2007)
Looking for the evidence • Theoretical explanations and numerical simulations demonstrate relevance, but useful application requires empirical evidence based on real data • But such evidence is not straightforward and depends on: • The geographical scale of the empirical study • The unit of analysis • The ability to control for other factors which determine urban development • Look at three levels and types of study • Those which only look at macro aggregates • Those which examine the working of individual markets • Those which look in detail at the behavioural responses of individual agents.
Evidence – macro studies • The Aschauer legacy • The productivity of public infrastructure • Public infrastructure and the enhancement of the productivity of private infrastructure • Debunking crowding out • Excessive optimism • Geographic scale • Econometric problems • Causality • Spatial autocorrelation and spatial spillovers • What should we measure? • Output • Employment • Productivity
Evidence – market studies • Exploring detail of agglomeration models • Competition effects • Ambiguity • Pro-competitive effects from lower transport costs • Limited by existence of imperfect competition and rent seeking • Agglomeration effects • Localisation economies • Urbanisation economies • Productivity effects – elasticities typically 0.01 to 0.4 for industry but 0.2 or higher for services • Spatial scale variations • Linkage effects • Labour markets
Estimating elasticities • Agglomeration measured as ‘effective density’. Total effective density (U) of employment that is accessible to any firm located in area i is where Eiis total employment in area i, Aiis its area, Ejis total employment in area j, and dijis the distance between i and j. • Effective density measure captures the scale and proximity of economic activity that is available in particular locations. • Agglomeration economies are treated as a technology component that shifts a firm's production or cost function: Y = g(U)f(X) where Y is the output level of the firm, X is a vector of factor inputs, and g(U) is a vector of influences on production that arise from agglomeration economies. • Firm level data used to estimate a translog production function
Estimated elasticities of productivity with respect to agglomeration, evidence for London From Graham (2007)
Evidence – micro studies • Why micro studies – changes in behaviour and organisation • London Congestion Charge impacts • Labour market effects • Accessibility and property prices • Jubilee Line impact (Gibbons and Machin) • Increase in values +9.3% in areas with new stations • 1km reduction in access led to 1.5% increase in values • Business organisation • HSR effects and internal restructuring • Concentration to access to network rather than along network
CBA: the standard approach Generalised Cost C C’ D Volume Q Q’
CBA: the standard approach • But what are the assumptions lying behind this? • Perfect competition so that p=mc • No externalities so that mc=smc • No returns to scale so mc constant • Demand is only responsive to a change in price, not a change in supply (i.e. a fixed trip matrix) • Suppose we change these assumptions • mc is upward sloping and smc>mc • But with increasing returns mc could slope down • p≠mc • And D could shift outwards in response to changing opportunities • But suppose that agglomeration also caused mc to shift downwards • Is the outcome now so determinate?
CBA and transport appraisal • The pure transport CBA: • perfect competition in transport-using sectors • transport cost and benefits an acceptable approximation of final costs and benefits • The best practice CBA: • takes account of all indirect and direct responses by economic agents under conditions of perfect competition in the economy as a whole • includes all dimensions of travel choice, repercussions on land use and economic activity, all externalities including environmental impacts • The theoretically optimal CBA: • all direct and indirect responses by economic agents included • assumption of perfect competition relaxed (price ≠ msc) • imperfections or failures in both goods and factor markets: imperfect competition in product markets, wages exceeding the opportunity cost of labour, taxation effects, external costs and benefits.
Two UK examples • Crossrail • Urban rail project in London • Cost GBP16bn • Direct user benefits insufficient • But could have significant agglomeration benefits? • HS2 • High-speed rail line London-Birmingham (with possible extensions northwards) • Cost GBP25.5bn • Direct user benefits estimated sufficient • But wider benefits add (although relatively smaller than urban situation) • Have all the impacts been captured?
Transport policy objectives • Is transport over-burdened? • Transport issues subordinate to wider policy interests? • Over-reliance on transport to solve all a region’s problems is unwise. • Where this policy involves significant capital expenditure it may also be inefficient – lead to over-investment. • But if wider benefits of transport are significant then if appraisal techniques ignore these leads to underinvestment. • Transport infrastructure a major part of any economy. • Transport has more complex impacts on output and growth • If transport costs are reduced industries become more competitive • Improved transport contributes to productivity growth. • Changes in the location of activities • Employment growth
Implications for policy • Simple rules are dangerous • Investment in transport can damage your health • Failure to invest in transport can damage it too • Appraisal rules need to be comprehensive but transparent • Decisions have to be robust • But clearly understood by all stakeholders • Levels of decision making • Spillovers • Policy refraction in multi-level governments • Jurisdictional competition and over- or under-investment
Concluding remarks • Full circle on wider benefits • From “transport is critical” • To “beware double counting” • To “wider benefits are the key” • But beware all simple rules in transport appraisal • There remains much on the research agenda • Imperfect competition and the productivity gains from transport • Micro-behavioural evidence • Link versus network effects • Spillovers and jurisdictional competition • More ex post studies, does transport investment really make the difference claimed?