The full cost of intercity highway transportation.

Author(s)
Levinson, D.M. & Gillen, D.
Year
Abstract

In this paper the authors review the theoretical and empirical literature on the cost structure of the provision of intercity highway transportation and specify and estimate their own functions. They develop a full cost model which identifies the key cost components and then estimates costs component by component; user costs, infrastructure costs, time and congestion costs, noise costs, accident costs, and pollution costs. The total long run average cost is $0.34 per vehicle km traveled. The single largest cost category is freeflow travel time. While the marginal cost of infrastructure is higher than its average cost, indicating that new construction is increasingly expensive, the marginal cost of driving (user fixed and variable costs) is less than the average cost, indicating that by increasing travel the user can spread his fixed cost of a vehicle over more trips without penalty. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
C 20219 [electronic version only] /10 / ITRD 899981
Source

Transportation Research Part D - Transport and Environment, Vol. 3 (1998), No. 4 (July), p. 207-223, 33 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.