Agent-Based Model of Price Competition, Capacity Choice, and Product Differentiation on Congested Networks
Using consistent agent-based techniques, this research explores the welfare consequences of product differentiation on congested networks. The economic analysis focuses on the source, evolution, measurement, and impact of product differentiation with heterogeneous users on a mixed ownership network. Path differentiation and space differentiation are defined and measured for a base scenario and several variants. The findings favour a fixed-rate road pricing policy compared to complete pricing freedom on toll roads. It is also shown that the impact of production differentiation on welfare is not always positive and depends on the level of user heterogeneity. © 2008 LSE and the University of Bath
Year of publication: |
2008
|
---|---|
Authors: | Zhang, Lei ; Levinson, David M. ; Zhu, Shanjiang |
Published in: |
Journal of Transport Economics and Policy. - London School of Economics and University of Bath, ISSN 0022-5258. - Vol. 42.2008, 3, p. 435-461
|
Publisher: |
London School of Economics and University of Bath |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Zhang, Lei, (2008)
-
The economics of transportation network growth
Zhang, Lei, (2007)
-
Agent-Based Model of Price Competition and Product Differentiation on Congested Networks
Zhang, Lei, (2007)
- More ...