We study interaction between the trips of two types of drivers on a two-lane road who
differ by their desired speeds. The difference in desired speeds causes congestion,
because slow drivers force fast drivers to reduce their speed. An interesting aspect of
this type of congestion is that results with respect to tolling are very different from
those of the classical Pigou-Knight model where the marginal external costs are an
increasing function of the number of road users. In our model we find the opposite
result: the marginal external costs of slow drivers are a decreasing function of the
number of slow drivers. This leads to rather different policy recommendations. In
many situations either laissez faire (no tolling or traffic restrictions) or prohibition of
slow drivers to enter the road is in practice (i.e. taking into account costs associated
with tolling) the optimal policy. This conclusion hardly changes if the possibility of
overtaking is introduced into the model.
Original language | English |
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Place of Publication | Amsterdam |
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Publisher | Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam |
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Number of pages | 31 |
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Publication status | Published - 2000 |
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Name | Tinbergen Institute Discussion paper |
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Volume | 00-091/3 |
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