Urban travel behavior as the outcome of public policy: The example of modal-split in Western Europe and North America.

This article compares modal-split - how people get from place to place - for 12 countries in Western Europe and North America. Differences in travel behaviour arise largely from public policy differences, especially from differences in automobile taxation. In addition, variations in transit subsidies, land use controls, and housing programs significantly influence travel choices, although sometimes only indirectly. The success of public transportation depends more on supportive urban development and automobile taxation policies than on trasit subsidies. The absence of such complementary policies in the U.S. - unlike the other countries studied - explains the ineffectiveness of the attempt to reveive American public transportation exclusively through large subsidies.

Record #:
1523
Date:
1988
Format:
Journal Article
Author:
Pucher, John
Source:
Journal of the American Planning Assocation
Citation:
Autumn 1988
Keywords:
TRANSPORT PLANNING;TRANSPORT;PUBLIC POLICY;PEDESTRAINS;CYCLISTS;MOTOR VEHICLES
Identity:
EUR;USA
Location:
f
Class:
F000

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