Have Americans hit peak travel? : a discussion of the changes in US driving habits. Paper prepared for the Roundtable on Long-Run Trends in Travel Demand, 29-30 November 2012.

Author(s)
Puentes, R.
Year
Abstract

American driving habits are changing. After decades of steady increases in the amount of driving, the number of vehicles, and the extent of licensed drivers, there now appears to be a shift. The growth is clearly levelling off, and dropping on a per capita basis, even at a time when a vast array of public policies continue to support and encourage driving. Perhaps even more amazing are total aggregate declines in some recent years coupled with drops in licensing, trips, and vehicle purchases. However, this phenomenon is still not well known. When they are recognized, these individual trends are either largely dismissed as economic factors caused by the global recession and stubbornly high unemployment rate. While there is little doubt that the sputtering US economy has major impact, emerging research suggests the changes in US driving habits are also the result of a long-term structural change reflective of a host of shifts in demographics, culture, technology, as well as settlement patterns in US metropolitan areas. A set of public policies also plays a key role. This paper explores those macro forces through an analysis driving trends, a review of existing literature, and discussion what is likely behind these trends as well as implications for public policy. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20130059 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Paris, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development OECD / International Transport Forum ITF, 2012, 22 p., 37 ref.; Discussion Paper No. 2012-14

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