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The Effect of Transport Taxes on Society Matts Andersson WSP Christer Anderstig WSP Håkan Berell WSP Svante Berglund WSP Jonas Eliasson KTH Royal Institute of Technology Michael Lundholm Stockholm University Tommy Lundgren SLU Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Roger Pyddoke VTI Marcus Sundberg KTH Royal Institute of Technology Jonas Westin KTH Royal Institute of Technology Keywords congestion charges, fuel tax, kilometre tax, tax base, double dividend, socio economic, costbenefit analysis JEL Codes R41, R48 ISBN: 978-91-980117-0-8 Centre for Transport Studies SE-100 44 Stockholm Sweden www.cts.kth.se Title: The Effect of Transport Taxes on Society Authors: Matts Andersson (WSP), Christer Anderstig (WSP), Håkan Berell (WSP), Svante Berglund (WSP), Jonas Eliasson (KTH Royal Institute of Technology), Michael Lundholm (Stockholm University), Tommy Lundgren (SLU Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences), Roger Pyddoke (VTI), Marcus Sundberg (KTH Royal Institute of Technology), Jonas Westin (KTH Royal Institute of Technology) Keywords: congestion charges, fuel tax, kilometre tax, tax base, double dividend, socio economic, cost-benefit analysis JEL Codes: R41, R48 ISBN: 978-91-980117-0-8 Summary Without investment costs, financial policy measures are almost by definition socio-economically profitable if they push prices closer to the marginal cost. But since most transport taxes include an investment cost the question is, as with physical investments, if the benefits are larger than the costs. large part of the benefit of transport taxes might be that the income can be used to lower other taxes, which might have positive effects on the economy. This positive effect is called “marginal cost of public funds” (MCPF) in the economic literature. Sometimes it is argued though that the effect on the tax base cancels the incomes from the policy measurement, meaning that the “double dividend” (decrease in the externality and using the income to lower other, distortionary, taxes) of environmental taxes does not exist. The Swedish recommendations for transport CBA (ASEK) was until 2008 to include the full double dividend effect in CBA for by multiplying the change in tax revenue with MCPF. In 2007 evaluations of kilometre tax where done including no double dividend effect using the tax base argument above. In the last published recommendations (ASEK 4, 2008) is not clear on whether to include the double dividend effect in the evaluation of economic policy measures. Since the question of double dividend is crucial for the socio economic profitability of most transport taxes it is highly desirable to clarify this issue. This project aims at providing such clarification. This report consists of five articles concerning CBA for transport taxes. The first article gives survey of the literature. The other four articles are more case oriented, analyzing the effects of congestion charges, fuel tax and kilometre tax. This summary is meant to sum up all five articles in way that is accessible also for nonscientists. The project is financed by VINNOVA, CTS Centre for Transport Studies, VTI and KTH Royal Institute of Technology. People from WSP (Matts Andersson, Christer Anderstig, Svante Berglund, Håkan Berell), VTI (Roger Pyddoke), Stockholm University (Michael Lundholm), KTH (Jonas Eliasson, Marcus Sundberg, Jonas Westin) and SLU Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (Tommy Lundgren) have participated. Matts Andersson has been project leader. Article 1: The treatment of changes in tax levels and new tax instruments in transport sector cost-benefit analysis – A synthesis The purpose of this paper is to survey theoretical and empirical findings concerning the treatment of welfare costs for the revenue from taxes in costbenefit analysis. The main results are the following. In situation with optimal taxes there is no double dividend effect, i.e. the only benefit of the implementing/raising tax on an externality is the decrease in the externality. Though, when taxes are not optimal there can be significant effect. From an initial position where taxes are optimal, any small changes of levels with balanced budget will result in tax base changes that cancel out any welfare effects. For situation where taxes are not optimal there are trivially both gains from introducing an externality correcting tax and from moving closer to optimum. In the latter case, the effect from introducing tax instrument might be that tax revenues can increase without welfare loss. This depends on how far from optimum an initial situation is. complete evaluation of MCPF would require numerical social welfare function which is not developed. In view of this lack one may use efficiency based calculations of MCPF being aware that the desired redistributional effects of taxes are not evaluated by this method. Each tax instrument can, in principle, be associated with its own measure of MCPF and each combination of tax instrument and form of public spending can, in principle, also be associated with its own measure of MCPF. The multitude of MCPF:s necessitates weighting process. As there are many measures it is no surprise that there is quite wide interval of estimations for the MCPF, the variation in the literature is caused by different measures of MCPF and estimations done for different countries, time periods and tax instruments. An important distinction is also between studies assuming that the public funds are used for public good and those assuming lump-sum redistribution (the MCPF will typically be smaller in the latter case). The estimations of MCPF:s are also highly dependent on the labour supply elasticities associated with in particular income tax rates for different income groups, especially the propensity of the individuals not presently employed to get employment. Article 2: Congestion charges and the labour market: “Wider economic benefits” or “losses”? The presence of distortive taxation and agglomeration benefits in the labour market mean that there are benefits and losses not captured by standard costbenefit analyses of transport policy measures. Recent theoretical analyses have raised concerns that the labour market effects of congestion charges may constitute considerable losses in the form of reduced aggregate labour income, over and above what is captured by the consumer surplus in the standard analysis of congestion charges possibly to the extent that congestion charges may reduce aggregate social welfare, contrary to conventional wisdom in transport economics. The sign and size of these effects are an empirical question, however. We investigate this issue by estimating the labour income effects of the Stockholm congestion charges, using an estimated relationship between workplace accessibility and labour income. Results show positive effects on labour income, meaning that the “wider economic benefits” of this system are in fact benefits, not losses. It turns out to be crucial that the model accounts for value-of-time heterogeneity in the income/accessibility relationship and in the calculation of generalized travel costs. In this paper the estimated increase in labour income is 60 M€/year. Intuitively, groups with high values of time get increased accessibility, while groups with low values of time get decreased accessibility. Some travellers may also gain accessibility due to network effects (“spillback” of congestion reductions). The aggregate change in accessibility may be either positive or negative. But the model estimations showed that changes in accessibility affects labour income more for high-income groups than for low-income group. This is intuitively plausible, since high values of time are correlated with high income and high education, and such groups generally get higher wage premiums for increasing work trip length. Hence, one may have positive effects on labour income even if aggregate accessibility decreases. The question in terms of the double dividend discussion could be formulated as “will the decrease in labour income (the tax base investigated) neutralize the dividend from using the revenues to lower other, distortionary, taxes?”. Since the labour income increases the answer is that there is double dividend for the Stockholm congestion charges. The paper also analyses the effects of an increased fuel tax, designed to give the same tax revenues as the congestion charges. In contrast to the congestion charges, this does not give any appreciable travel time savings, so accessibility decreases for all groups. Consequently, the fuel tax has quite different consequences for labour income. While the congestion tax is estimated to increase labour income with nearly 60 M€/year, the fuel tax is estimated to decrease labour income with nearly 95 M€/year. The size of the decrease varies between municipalities and between value-of-time categories in the same municipality. This variation can mainly be explained by the variation in the car modal share, which is linked to variation in land use pattern and supply of public transport. In the case of the fuel tax it is clearly not correct to assume full double dividend effect (ie. to just add tax revenue times MCPF to the benefits). One needs to compare this tax base effect with the MCPF-effect. Article 3: How to evaluate the welfare effects of congestion charges? common argument in the road pricing literature is that the way the revenues from road toll are recycled is crucial for the overall welfare of the policy. An early contribution (Parry and Bento, 2001) looked at welfare effects of combination of road pricing and the redistribution of the revenues. lively debate has considered the most welfare improving ways of using the revenue. In this paper the results in 2001 are further developed by examining the effect of introducing congestion tax under number of different budget neutral revenue recycling policies is analyzed. The examined policies are to use all revenues from the congestion tax to; an income tax reduction, an increased public transit fare subsidy, an increased provision of public good, and lumpsum redistribution. These policies are also compared to budget neutral recalibration of all policy instruments. In addition to the theoretical expressions for evaluation of these scenarios number of numerical calculations are presented. The most important result is that if the initial situation is modeled as secondbest optimum with the restrictions that neither lump-sum nor congestion taxation is available, budget neutral change in any of the initially nonconstrained policy instruments will have the same welfare effect. This means that any revenues from marginal congestion tax will produce the same welfare, regardless of which of the policy instruments the revenues are spent on. The consequences of starting from non-optimal policies are also examined, resulting in that the initial point may influence the analysis significantly. If we analyze model where we explicitly (or implicitly) assume that the taxes are too high compared to social optimum, we will find that it is better to use the toll revenues to lower other distortive taxes. If we on the other hand assume that the public transport subsidy initially is below social optimum, it will be preferable to recycle the revenues on increased subsidies. Differences in the relative efficiency of different revenue recycling policies, especially for marginal toll policies, are therefore more related to the initial model assumptions regarding the initial situation than being direct feature of the road toll per se. For non-marginal toll policies, interactions between the road toll and the other policy instruments also need to be considered in the welfare analysis. For very large toll levels, the reduced congestion in combination with the tax base effect can for instance make the income tax cut out-perform the public transport subsidy, even in situations where the both policies initially were equally good. The type of general statements about how the revenues from road toll should be spend to maximize welfare that can be found in the research literature is problematic since the relative efficiency of different recycling policies so strongly depend on the particular situation we analyze and what assumptions we make regarding the efficiency of the initial policy instruments. The analysis is also sensitive to what markets and interactions we include in the analysis and whether we, for instance, include distributional considerations in the welfare function or not. Article 4: Welfare Effects of Congestion Pricing in a Population with Continuously Distributed Value of Time Interactions between the transport market and other distorted markets, such as the labor market, can have large impact on the overall welfare effect of road pricing policy. Many road pricing studies therefore try to incorporate effects from other distorted markets in the analysis. critical assumption in many of the previous analyses of congestion charges is that there only exists single value of time. This is somewhat surprising since one of the main features of congestion charge is that it sorts people related to their value of time, given the existence of feasible transport alternatives. The purpose of the paper is to analyze the labor market effect from congestion charge when commuters have continuously distributed value of time. Using disaggregated demand model for the individuals’ choice of travel mode, the paper studies the distributional impact of different revenue recycling policies, and analyzes how the mode choice self-selection mechanism affects the total welfare effect of congestion charge. In stylized numerical example, the effect of three different revenue recycling polices are analyzed; lump-sum transfer, labor tax cut, and welfare maximizing readjustment policy. Contrary to the general conclusion in many previous studies, the paper finds that when the revenues from the congestion charge are recycled back to the population, the overall effect welfare effect is positive, regardless if the revenues are returned in lump-sum transfer or used to cut distortionary income taxes. The analysis hence stresses the importance of recognizing that people have different value of time and that this can have substantial effect on aggregate labor supply and hence welfare. The reason for this is that the congestion charge primary price out people (and trips) with low willingness to pay so that people with higher willingness to pay can drive and work more. Disregarding equity considerations, the congestion charge leads to more efficient use of the available road space. The results also indicate that public transport subsidies may increase labour supply more than the corresponding labour tax cuts. We also find that even though the total welfare effect from the congestion charge for marginal toll levels does not depend on the chosen form of revenue recycling, the distributional impact of the policies can be significant. Article 5: Kilometre or diesel tax in Sweden? A cost–benefit analysis The aim of this article is to examine to socio economic profitability of kilometre and diesel tax. To suggestions are examined. The Swedish institution for communication suggested kilometre tax of SEK per vehicle kilometre. This is based on the external effects calculated to 1.4 SEK per km, out of which 0.4 SEK is internalized by the energy tax. The Swedish opposition suggested that the CO tax on fuel should be raised with 0.17 SEK per kilo CO 2, which implies that the diesel tax increases with 2.64 0.17 0.45 SEK per litre diesel. Examining the socio economic profitability and examining the tax base effect is different sides of the same coin. As mentioned above discussions about tax base effects are often based on analytical (i.e. non empirical) models assuming optimal conditions. In this article we start out with an analytical model, but we estimate the parameters/elasticities empirically on Swedish data. The estimations of the tax base, the marginal cost of public funds etc. are done with both factor demand-model (FDM) and spatial general equilibrium (SCGE) model (STRAGO). Since FDM and SCGE are two quite different approaches, an aim of this study is also to compare these approaches. Our calculation implies that the kilometre tax is socio economically profitable, even very profitable in the FDM-based calculation. However when the investment and administration cost is added, 350 MSEK per year according to SIKA’s calculations, the profitability in the STRAGO-based calculation is slightly negative. It could be noted though that our estimation of the decrease in external effects is lower than SIKA’s, who estimates it to 180–400 MSEK per year. Changing to SIKA’s valuation makes the calculation slightly positive. There is obviously trade-off between making detailed calculation of one market, as in the partial model, and capturing all effects but on more schematic level, which is done in the general equilibrium model. When we estimate the tax base effect on private intermediate commodities (i.e. labour and capital) with the FDM, the net social benefit is extremely positive; since the net social benefit is approximately equal to the tax revenue from the kilometre tax the revenue comes “for free”. The direction of the difference between the partial (FDM) and the general equilibrium (STRAGO) estimates is logical since the equilibrium effects most likely are negative. The in market effect might be positive: increasing transport taxes makes firms replace transports with other production factors. Equilibrium requires market to clear (which counteract the in market effect) and increasing kilometre taxes on goods freight makes leisure relatively cheaper (which makes labour supply go down). Even though the sign of the difference between the model results is logical, it is hard to verify the size. Our calculation for the diesel tax shows similar pattern, but since it requires no investment or administration cost it is profitable in both calculations. It should be mentioned though that our calculations of the external effects does not capture the differences in benefits from kilometre tax compared to diesel tax, i.e. the reasons for making the investment. The differences are that kilometre tax can levied on all vehicles regardless of nationality (i.e. not possible to avoid the tax by filling the tank abroad) and, most importantly, can be differentiated very detailed (based on vehicle type, amount of people affected by pollution etc.). Main conclusions from the project In an optimal, first best, world there is no double dividend from tax instruments. In the real world though, it is an empirical question. This means that microeconomic CBA, “measuring the benefits on the road” for economic policy measures should be complemented with more specifically tailored models to examine to tax base effects. Since MCPF and tax base effect most likely are larger parts of the benefit for tax instruments than for physical investments the combination of micro economic CBA and tailored models is more crucial here, more so than for physical investments. Using both microeconomic CBA and tailored model means that the result could not be added directly, avoiding double counting is important. Since physical investments are not treated in this project, our conclusions concern only tax instruments (not, for example, weather to apply MCPF on physical investments). Our test of the effect congestion charges has on labour income showed surplus. This means that the tax base increased, indicating that there is double dividend (or even “triple”, since it is an increase). precise statement would require examination of the other tax bases affected. The main explanation for the positive result is that differentiated value of time is applied. Later applied in our general equilibrium setting, contrary to the general conclusion in many previous studies, we find that when the revenues from the congestion charge are recycled back to the population the overall effect welfare on effect is positive. This holds regardless if the revenues are returned in lump-sum transfer or used to cut distortionary income taxes. The fuel tax is estimated to decrease labour income with nearly 950 MSEK/year. This is equivalent to tax revenue decrease of 332 MSEK/Year (assuming that the tax is 35 percent of the change in labour income). The fuel tax is designed so that the increase in tax revenue would be 800 MSEK/year. This means that the decrease in labour income tax revenue is near half the size of the increase in the fuel tax revenue. This in turn means that the MCPF effect for the fuel tax should at least not fully be included in CBA. As with the congestion charges, precise statement would require examination of other tax bases (mainly consumption and the effect of more expensive business travels), but labour income is most likely the largest tax base affected by fuel tax increase. Both the kilometre and the diesel tax decreased the tax bases examined. Since kilometre and diesel (fuel) tax do not lower transport cost by decreasing congestion as congestion charges do, this is the expected result. The socio economic profitability for both taxes is very high using the FDM result. Using the STRAGO result, the profitability is lower. Since the results varied between STRAGO and the FDM, no clear interpretation for the double dividend debate could be made. The discussion about tax base and MCPF effects also has implications for the optimal level of the tax. The optimal level of the tax can be both higher and lower than the first-best Pigouvian tax (ie. the marginal cost). The literature has provided examples of where the optimal tax is higher, but it might also theoretically be lower. Table of content 1 The treatment of changes in transport sector taxes in cost-benefit analysis survey....................................................12 1.1 The marginal costs of public funds and the introduction of new tax instruments ..................................................................................... 12 1.2 Modelling responses to tax changes and marginal costs of public funds ...................................................................................................... 16 1.3 Welfare and tax base effects from externality correcting taxes..................................................................................................................... 21 1.4 Road pricing (congestion tax) considerations........................ 24 1.5 Some geographical dimensions..................................................... 26 1.6 Summary and conclusion................................................................. 30 1.7 Acknowledgements ............................................................................ 32 1.8 References .............................................................................................. 33 2 Congestion charges and the labour market: “wider economic benefits” or “losses”?.....................................................36 2.1 Introduction........................................................................................... 36 2.2 Literature................................................................................................ 38 2.3 The Stockholm congestion charging system ........................... 40 2.4 Modeling the relationship between income and accessibility ...................................................................................................... 41 2.5 Effects of congestion charges on Labour income .................. 47 2.6 Conclusions............................................................................................ 50 2.7 References .............................................................................................. 52 3 How to evaluate the welfare effects of congestion charges? .................................................................................................. 55 3.1 Introduction........................................................................................... 55 3.2 The model ............................................................................................... 58 3.3 Numerical experiments .................................................................... 63 3.4 Discussion............................................................................................... 71 3.5 Conclusions............................................................................................ 72 10 3.6 Acknowledgements ............................................................................ 73 3.7 References .............................................................................................. 74 4 Welfare Effects of Congestion Pricing in Population with Continuously Distributed Value of Time .........................75 4.1 Introduction........................................................................................... 76 4.2 Background............................................................................................ 77 4.3 Analytical model .................................................................................. 79 4.4 Numerical example............................................................................. 85 4.5 Concluding remarks ........................................................................... 93 4.6 Acknowledgements ............................................................................ 94 4.7 References .............................................................................................. 95 5 Kilometre or diesel tax in Sweden? cost–benefit analysis....................................................................................................97 5.1 Introduction........................................................................................... 97 5.2 Our two cases to be tested............................................................... 98 5.3 External Effects .................................................................................... 99 5.4 Model ..................................................................................................... 100 5.5 FDM ........................................................................................................ 102 5.6 STRAGO ................................................................................................ 104 5.7 Results................................................................................................... 105 5.8 Conclusions......................................................................................... 107 5.9 References ........................................................................................... 108 11 1 The treatment of changes in transport sector taxes in costbenefit analysis – A survey Roger Pyddoke, VTI Matts Andersson, WSP Abstract This paper was motivated by the analysis of introduction of new internalising tax instruments in the Swedish transport sector. The purpose of the paper is to survey the literature on welfare effects of taxes and discuss the implications for the application of the concept of marginal cost of public funds (MCPF) in costbenefit analysis. The paper draws together some important observations for the evaluation of internalising tax reforms. The consideration of the objectives of income redistribution effects has decisive influence on the assessment of the MCPF value. From an initial position where taxes are optimal, on the one hand, any small changes of tax levels with balanced budget will result in tax base changes that cancel out any welfare effects. For suboptimal taxes there are trivially both gains from introducing an externality correcting tax and from moving closer to tax system optimum. From pure efficiency perspective, on the other hand, it is noted that from the reference point of second best optimum without any correction of an externality, the introduction of correcting tax, even larger than the first best correcting level, with simultaneous budget balancing tax cuts of distortionary taxes, may yield welfare improvements. The conclusion is that when evaluating tax reforms the effects on tax bases as well as distributional effects need to be considered by general equilibrium models rather than applying general MCPF factor to net aggregate tax revenue from the reform. 1.1 The marginal costs of public funds and the introduction of new tax instruments The main question for this study is how tax revenue and the welfare effects of changes in the tax system should be treated in cost-benefit analysis. The general question is directed in particular to taxes intended internalize externalities in the transport sector. This question was triggered by study from the Swedish institute for transport and communications analysis (SIKA 2007) commissioned by the Swedish government on the costs and benefits of kilometre taxation for trucks. SIKA formulated two important assessments of the welfare costs of kilometre taxation underlying their cost benefit analysis. The first assessment was that tax revenues from the kilometre tax should not be increased with welfare gain corresponding to the marginal cost of public funds (Skattefaktor 2) (SIKA 2007 p. 45). The then current Swedish CBA practice in the transport sector suggested that the welfare costs of new transport tax instruments should be evaluated by the micro effects in the transport models and that the increased tax revenues should be evaluated by the marginal cost of public funds (MCPF). As the, then current, recommended value of MCPF equalled 1,3 this would have 12 implied that each extra krona of tax revenue could have an alternative value for reducing the distortionary taxes larger than 1. SIKA (2007 p. 35) assessed the calculable benefits of e.g. less wear and tear and less externalities associated with the kilometre tax to be 180-400 million SEK per year and the system cost to be 350 million SEK per year. In addition to this the welfare gain associated with the MCPF effect from reducing other distortionary taxes was 8-900 million SEK per year 1 The net from these three posts was thus in the range from 680 to 950 million SEK per year. The kilometre tax therefore initially appeared to be welfare improving, but after assuming MCPF to be it is not. At the same time as the cost-benefit rules suggested applying MCPF the already large literature on double dividends in the tax interaction literature (e.g. Bovenberg 1999) suggested that there was are no additional benefits from reducing other distortionary taxes when introducing or increasing suboptimal internalising taxes. Invoking results from the tax interaction literature (and citing Fullerton and Metcalf 2001) SIKA, therefore, chose not to count the welfare gain from reducing other distortionary taxes, arguing that this gain may be cancelled by equal reductions tax revenue caused by contractions of other taxbases on account of the introduction of/increase in the internalising tax. In the final instance SIKA argued that the uncertainty concerning these effects led them to recommend not counting the welfare gains from reducing other distortionary taxes, hence reducing the net from 50 to -170 million SEK per year and therefore concluding that the kilometre tax was likely to have negative welfare effects. The second assessment (also formulated in SIKA rapport 2007:5 p. 46) generalised the first assessment to other taxes motivated by external effects and said that the welfare gain associated with the marginal cost of public funds for other taxes (like the congestion tax) may not be valid either. Both the assessments suggest that the tax base effects may perfectly cancel the welfare gains from increased tax revenue. related question is therefore if there are other significant effects on tax bases that are not taken into account by the travel demand models and hence cost-benefit analysis. further question here is therefore to what extent improvements in accessibility in the transport system through congestion charges may in turn lead to effects on income. This effect can be expected to be larger if the values of travel time are differentiated. The most recent value of travel time study in Sweden (WSP 2010) shows that this is the case. The study indicates that there are substantial differences in travel time valuations. This finding may have important implications for both behaviour and valuation and consequently the assessment of the benefits from e.g. congestion taxes. The purpose of the project is to examine how the welfare costs of taxes or the average marginal cost of public funds could be treated in cost-benefit analysis of tax instruments for the internalisation of external effects in the transport sector. For this purpose the paper synthesises four different fields of economic 1 Table on p. 46 13 literature. The first is the literature on marginal costs of public funds. In this literature both theoretical and empirical analyses have been combined to assess the costs of collecting public funds. The second is the closely linked tax interaction literature concerning how different taxes interact and what their total effects are. The third is the literature on the effects of pricing in transport, e.g. road pricing and fuel taxes. The fourth, finally, concerns the effects of income from increases in accessibility to potential employment. In the following introduction we therefore present an overarching perspective of these literature fields. The issue of how to apply the marginal costs of public funds (MCPF) in costbenefit analysis entered the Swedish guidelines for the transport sectors costbenefit rule calculations in Kommunikationsdepartementet (1985)2 and was again removed in SIKA (2008) partly because the EU financed project HEATCO (2006) recommended using the MCPF=1 or practically disregarding it3 The recommendations for the transport sector was originally intended to be used primarily to analyse the effects from transport infrastructure projects, and to some extent to other measures intended to influence transport flows. This included for example changes in net public budget burdens caused from changes in transport flows and the corresponding tax revenues from fuel taxes. It was not, however, primarily thought as an instrument for the evaluation of potential new or changes in existing, tax instruments. The academic literature on MCPF has by 2010 developed to considerable extent; see for example Dahlby (2008). Two main approaches exist in the literature on the MCPF; the first calculating the welfare costs from changing tax and simultaneously changing lump-sum redistribution while maintaining budget balance and the second where the tax revenue instead is used for public good while maintaining budget balance. The first approach implies different measure for each tax instrument and the latter different measure for each combination of tax instrument and public good. There are number of well-established insights among which the following were considered important: i) Each tax instrument can, in principle, be associated with its own measure of MCPF 2 The earliest reference to MCPF in Swedish government texts that can find is Kommunikationsdepartementet ”Investeringsplanering inom Transportsektorn” DsK 1985:4. 3 The HEATCO consortium (2006) argued that “a majority of EU national transport project appraisal guidelines” do “not to include the marginal costs of public funds” and that there are three good reasons for not doing so (p. 48): The first being the large uncertainty about how large the marginal costs of public funds are (0.62 1.75). The second, that marginal costs of public funds are normally not considered when evaluating public projects outside the transport sector, and that therefore inclusion in the transport sector would bias decisions against transport. The third, that in practice, the question of the inclusion might not be as important as it might seem. Because only the best projects get financed, these projects tend to have high rates of benefits to costs. 14 ii) Each combination of tax instrument and form of public spending can, in principle, be associated with its own measure of MCPF (Hansson and Stuart 1985) iii) The multitude of MCPF:s necessitates weighting process iv) As there are many measures it is no surprise that there is quite wide interval of estimations for the MCPF, e.g. 1.15 to 2.52 in Kleven and Kreiner (2003). The variation in the literature is caused by different measures of MCPF and estimations done for different countries, time periods and tax instruments. v) The estimations of MCPF:s are also highly dependent on the labour supply elasticities associated with in particular income tax rates for different income groups. The question of how the propensity of the individuals not presently employed to get employment may be very important for the aggregate MCPF (Kleven and Kreiner 2006). further insight in the literature on tax systems is that it is desirable to model any tax system as the outcome of optimization. This implies interpreting given tax system as balancing costs and benefits in many dimensions. In full social welfare maximization sense this implies considering both efficiency and distributional concerns. If tax system is modelled as inefficient this implies some lack of representation of the process arriving at that particular form of tax system. In an inefficient system it also becomes trivial to find efficiency gains. The reasons for having “inefficiencies” should therefore ideally be underlying conflicts on the distribution of income, property rights or other endowments, or some lack of knowledge about the consequences of taxation. These imperfections may also be associated with inertia in adapting to new insights about the effects of taxation, technological developments or preferences. Even if the tax system is considered as an equilibrium in political bargaining process and the resulting system represents compromise between different preference this compromise still to some extent represents the underlying preferences. The underlying processes leading to new externality correcting taxation may in many cases be complex and opaque. Even if new tax instrument appears to deliver significant welfare gains the relative magnitude of the tax payments may pose an obstacle. The Swedish and the international political experiences and the academic debates on e.g. congestion charging have also demonstrated the difficulties of establishing democratic acceptability and legitimacy (Hårsman and Quigley 2010). Independently of the development of the MCPF issue in cost-benefit analysis, the question of tax reform also developed in Sweden. When the largest tax reform in Swedish modern history in 1990-91 was evaluated in SOU 1995:104, the issue of the dead weight losses from different tax instruments was also addressed. The commission concluded that it was difficult to make precise assessment of the dead weight losses from the tax system, as the calculations are highly dependent on uncertain estimates of labour supply elasticities. 15 These difficulties do not necessarily preclude the possibility to obtain useful information on the welfare effects of internalising taxes. In tax theory distinction is made between situations where non-distortionary lump-sum taxes are available, first-best and second-best where policy makers are restricted to use distortionary taxes on labour and goods. The basis for the internalisation of external effects is the first-best idea of pricing activities with their marginal external costs at each time and place. For this purpose it is useful to know how transport activities generate external effects and consequently costs. An examination of transport pricing and taxation reveals that the adopted tax levels do not correspond to approximately calculated first-best levels (e.g. SIKA 2004). Available calculations are, however, mostly partial and consider only some of the theoretically known trade-offs. It therefore seems inevitable that real life choices are approximate and imperfect. In addition to balancing the ultimate benefits from consumption and transport second-best analysis balances the consequences from the use of different distortive tax instruments. It is therefore important to know how behaviour and demand is affected by the presence of externalities. This paper therefore further presents research on how the introduction of congestion charges/taxes in conjunction with optimal adaptions of other policy instruments, influences welfare. In this part we review results of studies that have studied different uses of the tax revenue. central purpose is to compare how different schemes for using revenue perform. Finally we examine the accessibility effects from congestion taxes for those who continue to drive. purpose is to look at possible magnitudes of gains in income associated with improved accessibility from reduced car flows. The rest of the paper is organised as follows. In the following sections the central results in four different literature fields are discussed and summarised. Section presents models for the calculation of the marginal costs of public funds. Section covers the welfare and tax base effects from externality correcting taxes. Section discusses results applied to the transport sector and in particular congestion taxes. Section goes on to consider further geographical aspects associated with changes in accessibility. Finally Section summarizes and concludes. 1.2 Modelling responses to tax changes and marginal costs of public funds Connecting the choices of transport to the governments’ choice of tax instruments and tax levels introduces body of public economic considerations. The focus is mostly on the efficiency aspects of collecting tax revenue for the finance of public goods (e.g. Ballard and Fullerton 1992 for an overview, and Harberger 1964 and Dasgupta and Stiglitz 1971 for early contributions). In the early papers the public good is marginal lump-sum transfer. Ballard and Fullerton 1992 distinguish between the Pigou-Harberger-Browning (PHB) tradition and the Dasgupta-Stiglitz-Atkinson-Stern (DSAS) tradition. In the first 16 the tax revenues are used for lump-sum transfer to the households and in the second the tax revenues are used for public good. The theoretical experiments were initially conducted with assumptions of identical individuals and budget balance. They emphasised that the optimal amount of public goods depend on the welfare costs of raising revenue by distortionary taxation. Central observations in these papers are that for the use of public funds, it is necessary to evaluate changes in the level and structure of taxes in terms of the general equilibrium and the income effects. In Lundholm (2005a) the application of MCPF to cost-benefit analysis in the transport sector is approached. Lundholm notes that Ballard and Fullerton (1992) argue that the PHB-approach is not suited to use in CBA-context. They argue for the DSAS-approach. In this approach the general equilibrium effects of the public good are included in the welfare effects calculated as part of the welfare effects of the tax. Lundholm (2005a p. 11) summarises calculations from four papers with the PHB-approach and three papers with the DSAS-approach. The calculated values for MCPF in Sweden range from 1,05 to 36,4 for the PHB-approach and 0,71 to 7,1 for the DSAS-approach. This shows that the PHB-calculations generally are above and that the DSAS-calculations may lie below 1. The DSAS-approach is chosen by Hansson and Stuart (1985) who presented an early calculation of MCPF by computing general equilibria in model calibrated to Sweden. The main purpose was to calculate marginal cost of public funds for an arbitrary tax system optimal or not. In this way the question of the initial systems optimality is evaded. Welfare is represented by representative consumer. In this model balanced budget experiments are conducted where tax changes are accompanied by corresponding increases in public spending. The taxes are labour and capital taxes and the public spending are, either stylized public good not influencing private consumption or lump sum redistribution of income. In Hansson and Stuart’s model it could in principle be possible to compare welfare in scenarios with different trade-offs of private and public consumption. Such calculations were however not conducted. In summary (Lundholm 2005a) of the then current Swedish recommendations (SIKA 2002) noted that the interpretation of the literature on MCPF seems to be more in line with the PHB than the DSAS tradition. Neither SIKA nor Lundholm, however, discussed the fact that in the transport sector cost-benefit guidelines, most of the effects are represented by transport models. Such effects would otherwise have to be modelled with computable general equilibrium model (CGE), which in most cases would not have the high resolution provided by transport models. The dilemma for transport studies is one of choosing between, on the one hand, the high resolution in transport models and no interaction with other household decisions or, on the other hand, little resolution transport wise, but representation of interaction with e.g. labour supply and other consumption decisions in CGE models. 17 This is also central observation in Sandmo (1998). Sandmo argues that when the MCPF is to be used as practical tool by individual government agencies for different projects, then the definition of the MCPF should not be project specific. Therefore the effects of the public spending should not be included in the definition of the MCPF as in the DSAS-approach but instead be incorporated on the benefit side in the CBA and not double count them. The PHB estimates are therefore more appropriate for this approach. Sandmo’s (1998) argument also implies that the distributional consequences of taxation and public spending would have to be taken account for in the cost benefit analyses of individual agencies. One avenue to theoretically considering wider set of consequences involves representing heterogeneous individuals and using social welfare function. In Sandmo (1998) marginal costs of public funds are analysed for optimal and nonoptimal taxes. central observation is that distributional consequences should ideally be represented in calculation of the marginal costs of public funds. With this perspective and the notion that taxes maximise social welfare, the MCPF are equal for each tax instrument. When, on the other hand, taxes are not optimal there may be several MCPF:s. In Lundholm (2005b) the concept of marginal costs of public funds are analysed in context of social welfare function, optimal and non-optimal taxes, and hence in terms of social marginal value and costs. Lundholm generalises results in Håkonsen (1998) derived for representative individual to heterogeneous population. For this context the social marginal costs of public funds are defined as the ratio between the marginal shadow price of tax revenues and the average social marginal utility of income in the economy. central observation in the context of optimal taxes and social welfare is that the social marginal costs of public funds are 1, even if the taxes are highly distortionary. If, on the contrary, taxes are not optimal, the social marginal costs of public funds may differ, and need not be one. fundamental observation is therefore that in model with optimal taxation there can be no welfare gains from small changes in current tax instruments. This does not, however, exclude the possibility that new tax instruments may yield welfare gains. In Jacobs (2010) the marginal costs of public funds are examined in Mirrlees (1971) framework with heterogenous agents, optimal redistributive taxes, optimal provision of public goods and the marginal costs of public funds. central analytical departure point is to conduct the analysis in terms of social marginal value of private income and social marginal value of public income i.e. in terms of social welfare function. In this system the tax parameters are optimized and second best welfare optimum is characterized. The paper iterates the result that in optimum the marginal cost of public funds is one. Furthermore Jacobs (2010) demonstrates that within the chosen setting the provision of public goods is also determined by distributional concerns, if the willingness to pay for public goods is correlated with earning ability. In the Mirrlees/Jacobs context the unit of measurement is social value of income. This however makes it impossible to directly translate the value units into ordinary 18 monetary units, and the practitioner of cost-benefit analysis in the real world is left on his own. For practical cost-benefit purposes it is not clear what the computational implications of these theoretical results are. The following tentative conclusions are formulated here: On the one hand the results indicate that the purpose to redistribute income may account for some of the apparent inefficiencies observed for purely efficiency based measures. On the other hand real world tax systems are not likely to be optimal in all respects relevant for the current majority. frequent reason being that adapting tax systems to new circumstances may take time, implying that inefficiencies may prevail. Even though it is desirable to model taxes as optimal, distributional considerations pose empirical requirements that (as far as we have found) have not been met. This would for example imply estimating social welfare functions. In absence of well-defined preferences for distributional equality, it may still be useful to define and measure the MCPF in terms of private willingness to pay. This is also the path taken in the calculations in the literature. In Kleven and Kreiner (2006) an important extension to the previous models is introduced. The authors note that the response in terms of the choice to work or not may be more important than the response in terms of hours of work. Their main purpose is to make an empirical contribution to the estimation of the marginal costs of public funds for an arbitrary tax system and to examine how sensitive such calculations are to variations in the assumptions about among other parameters, the labour supply elasticities. The non-convexities in terms of fixed costs for participation in the active work force are therefore modelled. For some individuals this may imply that the choice to work may reduce welfare if the rewards in terms of income and other welfare gains do not exceed the costs incurred from working. An important extension is therefore to explicitly model heterogeneity among individuals. Kleven and Kreiner therefore explicitly model differences in individual skills (wage rates), fixed cost for work as well as preferences. Therefore the total welfare effects are modelled by social welfare function. The purpose in Kleven and Kreiner (2006) is to calculate the marginal costs of public funds and not to examine optimal tax structures or the optimality properties of current tax structures. Therefore the authors do not examine different taxes with respect to their excess burdens or distributional properties. In principle, however, model like Kleven and Kreiner’s allows for examinations of welfare trade-off’s of different tax rates and transfers. Kleven and Kreiner use model with the following form. The population is divided in subgroups with the same income and preferences for all individuals in each subgroup, but with heterogenous fixed cost to work q. The distribution 19 of is assumed to have the density function (qi). (qi and distribution function The fixed cost to work may be thought of as the sum of generalized travel cost and other fixed cost like clothing. The travel cost is in turn determined by the location of the individuals residence and work place. Individual utility is specified as vi (c,h) qi l(h>0) Where vi is individual utility, is consumption, of work and an indicator function. hours of work, the fixed cost Taxes are represented by T(wih, z) where w is individual i’s wage rate and shift parameter. Budget constraint (1-mi wi +Yi where m is the marginal tax rate and Yi the virtual income Yi miwi T(wih, z). In this context the taxes that optimise social welfare function subject to individual responses to the taxes may be defined. Kleven and Kreiner (2006) in the tradition of the literature on marginal cost of public funds however short cut the optimal taxes to discuss the effects of any tax system. The central result is that the effects from the individuals on the brink of choosing to participate in the labour force may be substantial. In Sundberg et.al. (2011) Hansson and Stuart’s (1985) calculations of the marginal costs of public funds in the Swedish economy are updated and extended. The purpose is to provide numerical calculation of the MCPF for cost benefit analyses in regional computable general equilibrium model calibrated for the Swedish economy. In this model consumption is represented as the consumption of representative consumer in each region, the factor markets, including the labour market, are represented as perfect market clearing markets and production is represented by firms in monopolistic competition in different sectors. In an earlier version of this model particular attention was paid to the representation of freight transport costs as the model was developed to represent the effects of freight kilometre taxes. In Sundberg et.al. (2011), the model is further extended to represent both indirect taxes and taxes on labour as well as public sector. This public sector is represented by expenditures in an abstract public good. The calculated MCPF’s are showed to differ for value added taxes, income taxes and capital. Furthermore the results differ for 20 different geographical regions. An average value for Sweden as whole is found to be 1,32 which is close to the value previously used in Sweden. The marginal costs of public funds are calculated with balanced budget where tax income is spent either on stylized public good or lump sum redistribution of income. further concern for this study is both to model public sector with balanced budget and still to measure the marginal costs of public funds without of the effects of the expenditures included in the measure. This objective is motivated by the fact that the benefits of transport projects and policies (i.e. investments in infrastructure as well as policy instruments like kilometre taxes) are modelled and calculated to high degree of resolution. 1.3 Welfare and tax base effects from externality correcting taxes In the tax interaction literature (e.g. Bovenberg 1999) the standard argument is that increases of taxes motivated by previously external effects do only yield welfare gain attributable to correction of the externality and no further welfare gains. In recent analysis of the Swedish tax system this was formulated as follows “when the initial indirect tax rates have been set in rational manner from non-environmental viewpoint, there is no gain in employment and nonenvironmental welfare from revenue-neutral green tax reform that introduces pollution taxes and uses the revenue to cut the labour income tax” (Birch Sørensen 2010 p. 199). An alternative formulation of this insight is that in an economy with optimal taxation except for one externality it is not possible to generate welfare gains from introducing one further tax due to the fact that this will decrease other tax bases The reason is that in the models where such effects are studied, the labour supply and other tax base effects, cancel out. As argued above, these adaptions are however, typically not accounted for in CBA calculations. But on the other hand “if for some reason the polluting goods were initially under taxed even when one abstracts from their environmental effects for example, if “dirty” goods carry lower initial tax rate than “clean” goods even though the price elasticity of demand for the two types of goods is the same then green tax reform would yield second dividend” (Birch Sørensen 2010 p. 199). This is possible, provided that the tax on dirty goods is brought closer to the Ramsey rule for optimal indirect taxation from below. Formulated in tax base terms this means that introducing an internalising tax in package to improve, an otherwise sub optimal tax system, further tax revenue can be raised without loss of welfare In this context it is important to understand that the marginal costs of public funds either as an aggregate measure, or as the vector of for example PHB measures, typically is measure distinct from the total welfare effect from introducing new tax instrument (e.g. congestion tax or kilometre tax) and using the tax revenues to reduce other distortive taxes. The MCPF, not counting the general equilibrium effects from government spending, will therefore (in the PHB-tradition) be number larger than 1. Therefore it may be consistent to have MCPF measure larger than 1, and tax base effects such that there will be 21 no welfare gains from introducing lowering other taxes. new tax instrument and simultaneously The tax interaction literature points out two important factors determining the results. The first of which is well known in the literature on marginal cost of public funds is that the precise policy experiment conducted has decisive effect on the calculated marginal costs of public funds and the second is the degree to which the tax system in the starting point is not optimal. This raises two possible reservations to the argument presented by Birch Sørensen. The first reservation is that for cost-benefit analysis purposes we need to think carefully about what policy context marginal cost of public funds is going to be used. Are we for example going to assume point of departure with optimal taxes or are we going to consider some imperfection in the initial situation. In the first case there will be no extra cost of public funds whereas there will be in the second. second reservation concerns the use of tax revenue. With optimal public spending the social marginal benefit of public spending will equal its social marginal costs. With less than optimal taxation and less spending, multitude of possibilities arise and the analyst may have to be obliged to retreat to some kind of averages for both marginal benefits and costs. In note Sundberg (2010b) points to some important but not obvious conditions for Birch Sørensen’s (2010) model and argues that the result therefore does not represent general condition but rather special case. The conditions are that a) all government revenue is used as lump-sum redistribution to representative consumer and that b) the indirect tax rates are assumed initially to be equal. Birch Sørensen (2010) (and Sundberg (2010b)) show that in such simplified model it is impossible to influence labour supply and hence there can be no second dividend. Sundberg (2010b) however, goes on to argue that when the budget balance condition is relaxed, increased tax incomes may be associated with increased spending in optimum. In this extended model and assuming well behaved parameters Sundberg shows that there will typically be second dividend when the labour tax can be reduced on account of the introduction of (small) internalising tax. In Sundberg (2010a) the marginal costs of public funds are calculated in stylised model of Sweden for three different tax instruments and for situation where the tax revenue is assumed to generate public surplus. The magnitudes are similar to Birch Sørensen’s (2010). Similar such observations have been made earlier. In Mayeres and Proost (2001) the results from earlier models were extended in four dimensions, by introducing non-identical individuals, externalities that are non-separable from consumption of private goods and the introduction of poll-taxes and public abatement. Starting from an arbitrary initial position, the central policy experiment is to increase the tax on an arbitrary good and to simultaneously reduce the tax on another good in situation that is not optimal. For numerical example with starting point calibrated on Belgium and stylized congestion charge, Mayeres and Proost (2001), demonstrate that that taxes on consumption (corresponding to value added taxes), congestion taxes and off peak taxes have marginal costs of public funds exceeding unity. With increasing 22 preferences for equality these MCPF’s decrease. Mayeres and Proost (2001) proceed to examine if there is potential for welfare improving tax redistribution between tax instruments. They show that for low preferences for equality raise of the congestion tax combined with lower consumption tax is welfare improving (which they call realising double dividend). Note that in Mayeres and Proosts (2001) example the results are derived under condition of recycling from an arbitrary point of departure. The question if second best optimum can be improved upon by introducing new internalising instrument is not considered. In Jaeger (2011) some important extensions are made to the models and analyses in the double dividend literature. Jaeger argues that the question of the welfare effects from second-best, revenue-neutral environmental taxation has been approached indirectly asking whether the second-best optimal environmental tax is higher or lower than the first-best Pigouvian rate. Jaeger further argues that more direct test suggested by Fullerton (1997) would be more appropriate. Fullerton suggests framework where consumption goods are taxed uniformly and where the optimal environmental tax is the difference between the optimal tax on the dirty good and the optimal tax on clean good. The test involves comparing the differences between the optimal tax on the dirty good and the optimal tax on clean good in the first-best and the secondbest. Jaeger defines reference first-best optimum as situation without commodity taxation, and second-best case as situation where commodities are initially equally taxed for fiscal purposes. The first-best optimum and the second-best optimum differ because in the second-best setting there are two further costs and benefits to be traded-off. In the second-best there are also fiscal effects to consider in the form of revenue recycling effects and tax base effects. In second step the tax on the externality generating good is raised and the tax of the clean good is lowered in budget balance. Jaeger argues that the important contribution of the double dividend literature is precisely the insight that the revenue recycling and tax base effects matter. The first central result is that in the second-best setting the marginal benefits from introducing small environmental tax will exceed those from those of introducing it in first-best setting, but as the environmental tax is increased the revenue recycling benefits decline, and the second is that in the second-best setting, raising the externality tax will be welfare improving Jaeger (2011) goes on to show that in basic model broadly consistent with the U.S. economy second-best optimal tax for dirty good is higher than the firstbest Pigouvian tax by one-third. He also shows that in the basic model in the second-best setting with initially only revenue raising taxes the first increments to the environmental tax will initially be welfare improving. These new theoretical results therefore place the question of the net welfare effects from introducing an externality correcting tax on an empirical ground. 23 The cost benefit practice in Sweden for infrastructure investments implied valuing changes in the net burden on the public budget by the marginal cost of public funds. In typical road investment this would entail large cost to the public for building road subtracting the increased revenues from petrol taxes as road use increases. When the recommended MCPF equalled 1,3 this meant that the cost from an increase in the net burden would have to be multiplied by 1,3. Applying this principle to the introduction of new tax instruments like kilometre and congestion taxes or increases in the level of tax instruments like the petrol tax appeared as straight forward. The double dividend literature however indicated otherwise. Jaegers (2011) analysis however suggests that it is likely that there are welfare gains to be had in addition to those arising from first best correction of an externality by further increasing the taxes on externalities and reducing other distortionary taxes. In companion paper to Jacobs (2010), Jacobs and de Mooij (2011) optimal Pigou taxes are derived. The central result is that, in optimum, the second-best externality correcting tax should not be corrected for MCPF. If, however, an externality generating commodity is more complementary to leisure than nonexternality generating commodities the tax should be adjusted for this. To conclude we therefore formulate the following observations. The basic results in the tax interaction literature are the following; when indirect taxes initially have been optimally set, increases in taxes motivated by externalities do only yield welfare gain attributable to the reduction of externality no further gain is generated due to that this decreases other tax bases when taxes are not optimally set further tax revenue can be generated without loss of welfare Jaegers (2011) paper appears to contradict the two first statements in so far as that, in second-best setting, it may be possible to generate benefits in addition to the externality correcting effects furthermore, the second-best optimal taxes may be larger than the firstbest optimal levels To assess tax effects in CBA context more specifically tailored models (eg. Mayeres and Proost 2001 or Calthrop et.al. 2010) may have to be used. For tax reforms having small effects on national labour supply the effects on the aggregate measure of MCPF is likely to be small. Locally the interaction effects on labour supply or consumption may be more substantial. 1.4 Road pricing (congestion tax) considerations The literature on road (congestion) pricing and its welfare ramifications is now considerable. An early contribution (Parry and Bento 2001) looked at welfare effects of combination of road pricing and the redistribution of the revenues. lively debate has considered the most welfare improving ways of using the revenue. Several economists have argued for reduction of distortive taxes and preferably labour taxes e.g. Mayeres and Proost (2001) and Parry and Bento 24 (2001). This touches directly on the question if the introduction of an efficient Pigouvian externality correcting tax can improve welfare. Economists have noted that how the revenue is used matters as well as the exact assumption about the possible and desired variations in labour supply which in turn is governed by rules, conventions and preferences. Parry and Bento (2001) represents an early analysis of the interaction between traffic congestion and labour supply in market distorted by taxes. In the line of thinking from the marginal costs of public funds literature, Parry and Bento (2001) study increases in congestion tax used to lower income tax, subsidise public transit fares and lump sum transfers. In model with representative household, the supply of number of workdays, commuting mode and consumption is chosen. Furthermore the government’s budget constraint is represented. No explicit optimization on the part of the government is represented. The paper both presents some benchmark theoretical expressions for household behaviour and the government’s budget balance. The authors conclude that in their analysis, the introduction of congestion tax on workrelated traffic with revenues returned in the form of lump-sum transfers reduces labour supply and the welfare loss can offset the welfare gain from the congestion tax. In the case of using tax revenue to lower income taxes, labour supply and welfare are increased. In Westin (2011a) the results in Parry and Bento (2001) are further developed. The most important consideration introduced by Westin is that he models the initial situation as second-best optimum with the restrictions that neither lump-sum nor congestion taxation are available. In addition to the theoretical expressions for evaluation of these scenarios Westin presents numerical calculations. The policies modelled are further re-optimisation of all the policy instruments and compares this to budget neutral policies like putting all revenue from the congestion tax into respectively; income tax reduction, public transit fare subsidy increases, public good provision increases and lump-sum redistribution. The results are that initially all policies yield the same welfare effects. Obviously the re-optimising policy performs best. Less obvious is that for larger congestion tax reductions the corresponding lowering of income taxes out-performs the other non-optimising policies. Westin (2011a) also examines the consequences of starting from non-optimal policies, and finds that the initial point may influence the analysis significantly. The distributional impacts of tax reforms have also received increasing attention in economic research (Mayeres and Proost 2001). central reason for this is that the revenues from externality correcting taxes in many cases may be much larger than the value of the corrections. conclusion is that reform can not be judged on efficiency and acceptability grounds alone. Instead wider analysis of in particular the effects on labour markets is needed. Westin (2011b) models road pricing in an area where there is congestion and introduces some extensions. This is done in general equilibrium framework with modal choice and heterogeneity of individuals which is represented as 25 distribution of the individual’s income earning capacity or wage rate, as well as the value of time. The central trade-off in the paper is how to use the revenue from congestion price. The alternatives are increases in lump-sum transfers, public transport subsidies and income tax cuts. These alternatives are compared to base case where the marginal benefits from all three policy instruments are equal, implying that social welfare is maximized before the congestion tax is introduced. The effects on social welfare are positive regardless of in which form the revenue is recycled. The congestion charge also reduces the positive effects of subsidy to public transport. In the model most individuals increase their labour supply and gain from the introduction of the congestion but not the individuals that change from car to public transport. They reduce their labour supply and loose welfare. The optimal adjustments of the instruments are largest for the public transport subsidy. No combination of recycling instruments yields Pareto improvements for all individuals. Adjusting the policy instruments also has different consequences according to how welfare is measured. The results also indicate that public transport subsidies may increase labour supply more than the corresponding labour tax cuts. 1.5 Some geographical dimensions Long term adaptions to transport changes An important focus in classical labour supply studies are the short term considerations where an individual makes her choice of labour supply and consumption, given her place of residence, work place and education, as these are considered as more inert in the short term. In longer term perspective all these givens are considered to be subject to choice. The modelling of such longer term choices makes for significant simplifications and assumptions in order to represent the perceptions of future consequences. Some of the longer term consequences of petrol and congestion taxes involve adaptations in residential and work place location. In standard model for residential location and commuting (Simpson and van der Veen, 1992) the consumer choses residence location depending on housing prices and determining commuting time. This model therefore represents trade-off between land and commuting costs. In an extended model, time is included, now implying trade-off between leisure, land and consumption. In such model education is taken as given as are the market prices for land in different locations. In further extension workplaces are assumed to be distributed in space and wage gradient dependent on the distance from the city centre is introduced. Simpson and van der Veen (1992, p. 56) argue that complete model of residential and workplace choice requires “the introduction of the labour 26 market in urban space”. They show that some important implications can be derived from simple model with two employment centres, central business district and suburban employment centre. In such city with smaller suburban employment centre in relative terms will have smaller wage gradient because central city firms will have to pay larger premium to attract larger proportion of suburban residents to central city jobs. The standard model has been extended to include the effect of skill level on job search behaviour in Simpson (1980). (See also Isacsson och Swärdh, 2007 for recent empirical application for Sweden). Simpson argues that skill acquisition broadens the spatial extent of job search because it is partly non-enterprisespecific and restricts job choice. Thus, skilled workers are likely to be less responsive to local employment conditions than unskilled workers, contrary to predictions based only on the value of commuting time from the more abstract models referred to above. Simpson and van der Veen (1992) argue that crosssectional household data from London and Toronto support this argument. In differentiated spatial model we could consider explicit assumptions on the amounts of residential capacity and distribution of income earning capacities among individuals. In computational model calculation of equilibrium land/housing prices as well wages associated with certain location of firms and jobs to workplaces could be performed. model incorporating job location is formulated in Simpson and van der Veen (1992). max [q(h,j), x(h,j), l(h,j)] s.t. p(h)q(h,j) x(h,j) w(j)l(h,j) w(j)T [c(h,j) w(j)l(h,j)] Where is distance of residence from the city centre, is the distance of the job from the city centre, the amount of housing, the amount of Hicksian composite commodity representing all other goods, p(h) is price gradient for housing, w(j) is the wage rate at distance from the city centre c(h,j) is the cost of commuting, This model generates the following equilibrium conditions: c p h w j w t j h q c j w (a) j L (b) Note that the wage rate varies by job location according to (b). Since c/ and t/ then w/ which means that the wage rate is decreasing with 27 the distance from the city centre. In this model the use of time is not modelled separately. In principle such model could be extended with congestion charge. Such theoretical representation of congestion problem should allow for the following components: spatial representation of the choice of residence and workplaces, link flows and congestion and its congestion externalities determined by link flows and possibly from flows in adjacent links i.e. congestion in one link creating congestion or delays in other links. Extensions for education/training and search costs for labour and employers are also possible. How is search equilibrium affected by increased accessibility? Our conjecture is that an increase in the accessibility to workplaces of high income earners will increase their search area. Some further steps towards extending models to improvements in productivity due to positive agglomeration externalities In Venables (2007) the implications of positive agglomeration externalities for the evaluation of urban transport policies are analysed. The departure point is the observation that urban centres tend to have higher factor productivity than areas with lower employment density. Venables suggests that the evidence is enough to accept the existence of positive city size/productivity relationship. He also argues that the relationship suggests several ways in which transport improvements may affect productivity. The exact mechanisms are however not modelled. Venables (2007) however points to more detailed survey of empirical work on agglomeration economies Rosenthal and Strange (2004). Accessibility effects from congestion and fuel taxes Road use and fuel taxation have potentially two important consequences. On the positive side such taxes may help to reduce negative externalities like air pollution, accidents and congestion. The reduction of congestion will consequently increase the accessibility, for those paying the congestion tax. On the negative side it reduces accessibility and the real income of road users, abstaining from using the roads on account of the congestion tax. As both the negative externalities and the benefits from road use are unevenly geographically distributed it makes sense to try to account for the geographical distribution of consequences. In this section we therefore survey results pertaining to how fuel and congestion taxes in the Stockholm region affect accessibility and income. Whereas the modelling of fuel taxes is straightforward, the modelling of the effects of congestion taxes is more complicated. The congestion tax in Stockholm which is charged for passing cordon encircling the inner city has been described and analysed in earlier papers (Eliasson 2009 and Eliasson et.al. 2009). central result in the analysis of road pricing is that for the welfare and distributional consequences the use of the tax revenue is decisive. Here we focus however on the effects of the tax on mode 28 and route choice, the effects on congestion, time savings and distributional aspects, and not on how the tax revenue is spent. In Stockholm only part (10 percent) of the total number of trips in Stockholm County are affected by the congestion charge. This implies that large part of the population only is affected insofar as the volume of traffic and if the use of public transport is affected. In both cases accessibility to employment is affected. Accessibility to employment may affect short run labour supply as well as more long term search activities and leading to better matches in the labour market. The resulting effects on income can be interpreted as the sum of the short term effects arising within static equilibrium model and further effects due to higher returns on search activities and productivity gains. Therefore we can not attribute the whole of the effect on income to improved accessibility. With good approximation of the general equilibrium effects we could regard the remaining effect as an upper bound for the accessibility effect. Without an overarching general equilibrium model well-defined effect is hard to quantify in way that is compatible to the CBA-methodology. In addition to theoretical analyses of the link between commuting time and labour supply there are empirical studies. Gutiérrez-i-Puigarnau and van Ommeren (2010) examine the effect of commuting distance on workers’ labour supply patterns. They distinguish between weekly labour supply, the number of workdays per week and the number of work hours per day. The answer to this question has implications for how labour supply is affected by congestion tax or fuel tax and how the tax revenues are used. For Germany Gutiérrez-iPuigarnau and van Ommeren (2010) find that distance has small positive effect on daily and weekly labour supply, but no effect on the number of work days. The effects are stronger, but still small, for females. The authors argue that the results imply that the effects from policies affecting commuting costs on labour supply are not likely to have strong effects on total welfare. They suggest that budget-neutral recycling of revenue in terms of reductions of income taxes may not be necessary to increase welfare. In Anderstig et.al. (2011) the possible effects on labour income caused by accessibility changes from congestion taxes and fuel taxes in the Stockholm County are estimated. Based on recent Swedish estimations of value of travel time (VTT), three categories of citizens with respectively low, medium and high valuations are identified. For these categories the elasticity of income with respect to change in accessibility are estimated. These are in turn used to calculate effects on income from changes in accessibility due to the congestion charge. The results suggest that the congestion tax system in Stockholm generates considerable positive effects on labour income, if differences in VTT are taken into account. For the category with high value the travel time savings due to less congestion, are higher than the increase in monetary costs, due to the congestion tax. The congestion tax is estimated to result in total (net) effect on labour income in the Stockholm County by nearly 620 MSEK, which represents an increase by more than 0.2 %. fuel tax increase, designed to generate an increase in tax 29 revenues of about the same size as the congestion tax, has quite different consequences for the income tax base. While the congestion tax is estimated to generate an increase of income, the fuel tax is estimated to generate decrease in income of about 950 MSEK, or reduction by nearly -0.4%. As indicated above it is important to remember that these calculations do not allow us to distinguish between the effects supposed to be captured by the standard cost-benefit methods and possible further effects. The results however indicate that the further effects may be positive and substantial and that simple rules of thumb assuming that tax base effects cancel out are not likely to be true. Furthermore an implication of these results is that, for cost-benefit calculations of transport policies, the central interdependencies between labour markets and transport markets have to be modelled in order to get the large effects right. 1.6 Summary and conclusion In this paper we have surveyed central results from the economic literature relevant to the assessment of welfare costs of taxes and how the effects from changes in the net budget burden. This has been done with the special attention to the tax instruments directed to the transport sector. Let us start with the observation that some recent papers start with representation of the tax system where the taxes are optimised to minimize the welfare costs of generating the tax revenue. This was however not the case in early papers on the marginal costs of public funds. Marginal costs of public funds fundamental value for the evaluation of changes in the net burden is the average marginal costs of collecting public funds. In system where both the expenses and the composition of the tax system are optimised, the marginal costs of collecting one further monetary unit should equal the marginal benefits of public spending. Therefore it should not be possible to increase welfare neither by adjusting the tax system nor the expenses. central result from the study of MCPF is that it is important to model both how tax revenue is generated and how it is used. When the public funds are used for public good, rather than lump-sum redistribution, the MCPF will typically be smaller. This presents dilemma for transport economist wanting to do costbenefit calculations. Should the MCPF be calculated with general public good in stylized model, or should the expenditures in the transport sector be modelled with more resolution in traditional transport models? The recommendation in Sandmo (1998) and in the official Swedish cost-benefit guidelines for the transport sector is to choose the latter. second central result is that in case with optimal taxation, however distortionary, the welfare losses from labour supply reductions are balanced by distributional gains. These gains are typically not considered in purely efficiency oriented calculations of MCPF. In order to quantify distributional gains in monetary terms an estimated social welfare function would be required. In absence of such measures efficiency based measures may still be useful. 30 Starting with Kleven and Kreiner (2003, 2006) it has been observed that the elasticity of the decision to participate in the labour market with respect to after tax income may have strong influence on the size of the calculated MCPF. This suggests that for the calculation of MCPF better estimates of the participation elasticities will be needed. Tax interactions The basic results in the tax interaction literature are the following; When indirect taxes initially have been optimally set, increases in taxes motivated by externalities do only yield welfare gain attributable to the correction of the externality. In optimum no further gain is generated due to that this decreases other tax bases. When taxes are not optimally set further tax revenue can be generated without loss of welfare. Jaegers (2011) paper appears to contradict the two first statements in so far as that it may be possible to generate benefits in addition to the externality correcting effects. Furthermore, the second-best optimal externality correcting taxes may be larger than the first-best optimal levels. To assess tax effects in CBA context more specifically tailored models (eg. Mayeres and Proost 2001 or Calthrop et.al. 2010) may have to be used. For tax reforms having small effects on national labour supply the effects on the aggregate measure of MCPF is likely to be small. Locally the interaction effects on labour supply or consumption may be more substantial. Transport externalities The central insights in early contributions (eg. Parry and Bento 2001 and Mayeres and Proost 2001) were that road pricing on congested roads may have important effects on labour supply and that the welfare effects in distorted labour markets may be substantial. In these papers the authors assume an arbitrary initial tax system and derive expressions for the welfare effects of introducing congestion taxes. In Westin (2011a) the results in Parry and Bento (2001) are extended. Westin starts from second best optimum where tax levels and public spending are optimised except for the absent congestion tax. He proceeds by numerical calculations to show that initially all policy instruments perform equally but that for larger changes re-optimising outperforms the other in delivering welfare improvement. For the case when the initial tax system is not optimal, and starting from differing starting points the effects may differ substantially. It is also shown that re-optimisation of the tax instruments and the public expenditures may imply an increase in government spending and redistribution of the tax burden. Accessibility effects from taxation in transportation Taxation in transport has two broad effects. The first is that it increases the costs of transportation, thereby reducing accessibility. The second is that by reducing the demand for transportation it may at the same time reduce all kinds 31 of externalities. By reducing congestion increase accessibility. tax increase may therefore also These effects are however not necessarily large in terms of labour supply. But even small effects may be considerable in terms of the cost-benefit analysis for the reform. In Anderstig et.al. (2011) the effects on income from accessibility changes due to congestion taxes and fuel taxes in the Stockholm County are estimated. The results suggest that the congestion tax system in Stockholm generates positive effects on labour income. This is primarily due to time savings for those with high value the travel time. The results therefor indicate that simple rules of thumb assuming that tax base effects cancel out may not be well based and that the central interdependencies between labour markets and transport markets have to be modelled in order to evaluate the congestion tax reform. Conclusions for CBA-analysis of tax changes In early recommendations for CBA calculations intended for the evaluation of infrastructure, it has been common to suggest the use of MCPF factor as sort of short cut for full scale general equilibrium calculations of the net cost of public funds. This paper has surveyed papers suggesting that for taxes such short cut may not be accurate enough. The presented examples show that tax base effects can reinforce as well as reverse the results suggested by simplified analysis. Therefore it cannot be recommended to use general MCPF number to evaluate introduction or substantial changes in tax levels. The suggested remedy is to use equilibrium modeling to represent the effects from taxation and the use of tax revenue that have to be considered. 1.7 Acknowledgements This project was financed by Vinnova and Centre for Transport Studies in Stockholm. am grateful for comments from Björn Carlén and Jonas Eliasson, and discussions with Jonas Westin and Marcus Sundberg. 32 1.8 References Anderstig C., Berglund S., Eliasson J., Andersson M, Pyddoke R. 2011, Congestion charges and labour market imperfections: “Wider economic benefits” or “losses”?, CTS working paper. Ballard, C. L. and Fullerton D. 1992, Distortionary taxation and the provision of public goods. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 6:117–131. Birch-Sørensen, P., 2010, Swedish Tax Policy: Recent Trends and Future Challenges, report to the Expert group on public economics no 2010:4. Bovenberg, A. L., 1999, Green tax reforms and the double dividend: an updated reader’s guide, International Tax and Public Finance, 6, 421-443. 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A., 1971, An exploration in the theory of optimum income taxation, Review of Economic Studies 38(2), 175–208. Parry, I.W. H. and Bento, A. (2001), ‘Revenue recycling and the welfare effects of road pricing’, Scandinavian Journal of Economics 103(4) 645–71. Rosenthal, S. and Strange, W. (2004), “Evidence on the nature and sources of agglomeration economies, in Henderson JV and Thisse JF (eds), Handbook of Regional and Urban Economics, Volume 4, Amsterdam: Elsevier. Sandmo, A., 1998, Redistribution and the marginal cost of public funds. Journal of Public Economics, 70, pp. 365–38. SIKA, 2002, Översyn av samhällsekonomiska metoder och kalkylvärden på transportområdet ASEK, Rapport 2002:4. SIKA, 2004, Trafikens externa effekter Uppföljning och utveckling 2003, rapport 2004:4. SIKA, 2007, Kilometerskatt för lastbilar kompletterande analyser, rapport 2007:5. SIKA, 2008, Samhällsekonomiska principer och kalkylvärden för transportsektorn: ASEK 4, PM 2008:3. 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(2007), ‘Evaluating urban transport improvements: cost-benefit analysis in the presence of agglomeration and income taxation’, Journal of Transport Economics and Policy 41 (2), 173–188 Westin, J., 2011a, How to evaluate the welfare effects of congestion charges?, paper in licenciate thesis, Department for Transport Science, Royal Institute of Technology. Westin, J., 2011b, Welfare effects of congestion pricing in population with continuously distributed value of time, paper II in licenciate thesis, Department for Transport Science, Royal Institute of Technology. WSP (2010) ‘The Swedish National value of time study 2007/08’, WSP Analysis Strategy, Mimeo (In Swedish) 35 2 Congestion charges and the labour market: “wider economic benefits” or “losses”? Christer Anderstig, WSP Matts Andersson, WSP Svante Berglund, WSP Jonas Eliasson, KTH Royal Institute of Technology Roger Pyddoke, VTI Abstract The presence of distortive taxation and agglomeration benefits in the labour market means that there are benefits and losses not captured by standard cost-benefit analyses of transport policy measures. Recent theoretical analyses have raised concerns that the labour market effects of congestion charges may constitute considerable losses in the form of reduced aggregate labour income, over and above what is captured by the consumer surplus in the standard analysis of congestion charges possibly to the extent that congestion charges may reduce aggregate social welfare, contrary to conventional wisdom in transport economics. The sign and size of these effects are an empirical question, however. We investigate this issue by estimating the labour income effects of the Stockholm congestion charges, using an estimated relationship between workplace accessibility and labour income. Results show positive effects on labour income, meaning that the “wider economic benefits” of this system are in fact benefits, not losses. It turns out to be crucial that the model accounts for value-of-time heterogeneity in the income/accessibility relationship and in the calculation of generalized travel costs. 2.1 Introduction It is well-established result within transport economics that congestion charges can yield considerable social surplus in congested road systems. The theoretical argument is obvious: pricing external congestion effects to make user costs better reflect social marginal costs will in general result in positive social surplus. Moreover, suggested or implemented real-world congestion charging systems have also been shown to result in significant net social surpluses, provided that investment and operations costs are not too high, and provided that practical restrictions of the design of the charges are not too severe. However, the standard analysis is confined to effects within the transport sector, i.e. travel times and travel costs as valued by travellers4 The standard analysis implicitly assumes that effects in other sectors either do not exist or are correctly priced, and thus can be disregarded. But the transport system is 4 In addition, environmental benefits such as reduced emissions and noise are often included. These are almost always positive, though, so it does not change the line of reason here. 36 closely linked to the labour market, and the labour market is subject to several market imperfections, such as distortive taxation, scale economies, agglomeration benefits and imperfect competition, all of which create costs and benefits which are external to the worker. In an influential paper, Parry and Bento (Parry and Bento, 2001) showed that the increase in generalized travel costs due to congestion charges may cause losses due to reduced labour supply at the extensive margin which are large enough to cancel out the transportrelated benefits. This discussion has continued in stream of literature (Parry and Bento, 2002)(Pilegaard and Fosgerau, 2008)(De Borger, 2009); (Van Dender, 2003). Arnott (Arnott, 2007) makes similar point related to agglomeration effects. This is the counterpart to the discussion of “wider economic benefits” in transport CBA i.e., that there are benefits in the labour market that are not captured by the standard transport appraisal framework. Distortive taxation and external agglomeration benefits mean that worker will not perceive the full social benefits of increasing working hours, going from unemployment to work, or taking better paid job further away from home. Since standard transport CBA only include consumer surplus as perceived by the worker/traveller, standard appraisal will not capture any increases in profits or tax revenues that are caused by an increase in working hours or productivity hence the term “wider economic benefits”. The same goes for congestion charges, but in this case the “wider economic benefits” may be losses, since generalized travel costs usually increase by congestion charges (although this is not always the case for all groups, as we will see later on). The problem, as pointed out by Parry and Bento (Parry and Bento, 2001)(Parry and Bento, 2002), is that these losses may be significant in fact, they may be larger than the benefits in the transport market. In the Parry and Bento model, the effect of congestion charges on aggregate labour income is always negative. This is because of two key assumptions: the congestion charges increase the generalized travel costs for all travellers, and labour supply only changes at the extensive margin. But once any of these assumptions are relaxed, it is easy to get model where the sign of the labour income effect is indeterminate (Westin, 2011a)(Westin, 2011b). First, as to how generalized travel costs change, they may in fact decrease for some groups of travellers. This may be because they have high values of time, or because of network effects, i.e. congestion reductions “spilling back” on links that are adjacent to the tolled ones. Heterogeneity in the value of travel time may be caused by differences in wage or travel purpose. Typically, the “wider economic benefits” associated with high-value-of-time trips can be expected to be larger, since the wage gradient with respect to commuting radius tend to be higher for high-income workers. Second, as to how labour supply adjusts, even if generalized travel costs increase and hence decrease labour participation and labour market matching, the decreased travel times for those still commuting by car may lead to the number of working hours may go up. Summarizing, not just the magnitude but also the sign of the labour income effects is indeterminate from theoretical point of view. Determining the sign and size of the effects is 37 hence an empirical question, and the outcome is likely to be different depending on the specific economic and geographic circumstances. In this paper, we investigate this issue using an estimated relationship between labour income and workplace accessibility. To reduce endogeneity and confounding problems, the model is based on how changes in workplace accessibility are related to changes in income, as opposed to the common practice of cross-sectional estimation. We use accessibility measures taken from large-scale transport model estimated on travel survey data. This means that changes in the transport system will be properly captured by the accessibility measure, and also ensures high degree of behavioural realism. The accessibility measures take heterogeneity in the value time into account. This is crucial for evaluating effects of congestion charges, since whether the generalized travel cost increase or decreases depends on the value of time. The income/accessibility elasticity is also estimated separately for different valueof-time categories. It turns out, as one would expect, that the income effect of an accessibility increase is larger for groups with higher values of time. Estimations are based on “quasi-disaggregate” data, where individuals are grouped into segments based on location and socioeconomic characteristics. Since the sign of labour income effects is indeterminate from theoretical point of view, one needs to study specific case to reach any conclusion. In this study, we apply the model to the Stockholm congestion charging system. This also enables us to calibrate traveller responses and travel time savings against observed data. Eliasson (Eliasson, 2009a) presents cost-benefit analysis of the congestion charging system. That study concludes that the system creates social surplus, but also points out that labour market effects are not included. In that sense, the present study can be viewed as complement to the CBA in Eliasson (Eliasson, 2009a). Section briefly summarizes the relevant literature. Section describes the Stockholm congestion charges. Section describes the estimated relationship between workplace accessibility and labour income. This is then applied in section 5, where the effect on labour income of the Stockholm congestion charges is estimated. Section concludes. 2.2 Literature Agglomeration benefits, tax distortions and transport CBA One of the cornerstones of “new economic geography” is the link between accessibility and productivity. There are several theoretical reasons why productivity is expected to increase with accessibility, often summarized in the catchphrase “sharing, matching and learning” (Duranton and Puga, 2004). The relation between accessibility and productivity is also well established empirically (Rosenthal and Strange, 2004). Several studies have shown connection between productivity and various measures of the spatial density of economic activity, e.g. Ciccone and Hall (1996), Combes et al. (2008) and Groot et al. (2011). In economic geography the effects of market accessibility on wages have been studied on larger spatial scale by e.g. Redding and Venables (2004) 38 and Hering and Poncet (2010). If the results are to be used as complement to standard transport appraisal, however, the agglomeration measure needs to be sensitive to changes in the transport system, which density measures typically are not. Studies using various measures of accessibility to labour include Kaliski et al. (2000), Graham (2007a, 2007b, 2009), (Graham and Kim, 2008). Hence, the existence of agglomeration benefits is well established. But agglomeration benefits are only partially captured by standard transport appraisal. To quote Graham and van Dender (2011): “Such benefits are in theory additional to those captured in standard CBA because they are sourced from increasing returns that are external to the firm and thus would not feature in the willingness-to-pay approach that underpins calculations of consumer surplus.” In other words, since agglomeration benefits are external to the worker/traveller, they are not captured by the consumer surplus, and hence not by standard CBA. Agglomeration benefits are not the only external benefits of work-related choices. Distortive taxation means that the worker will only perceive part of an increase in wage, employment or working hours. Hence, such benefits are also only partially captured by the consumer surplus used in CBA, as pointed out by Forsyth (1980). Venables (2007) stress that when there is both distortive taxation and agglomeration benefits, the external share of benefits will increase. Calthrop et al. (2010) show that failure to account for distortions such as agglomeration effects and tax distortions may cause severe errors in costbenefit analyses of transport improvements. So far, few countries have included “wider economic benefits” in their standard CBA guidelines. One exception is the UK CBA guidelines. The methodology and number of case studies are summarized in Jenkins et al. (2011). There are still comparatively few studies of precisely how much of total benefits that is captured by transport CBA, however, and moreover, our understanding of these relationships and the related econometrics are still limited, as pointed out by Graham and van Dender (2011). They show that the estimated relationship between accessibility and productivity is highly dependent on model specification, indicating severe problems with confounding and endogeneity. Congestion pricing, labour market distortions and heterogeneity in the value of time Parry and Bento (2001, 2002) point out that congestion charge will affect labour supply negatively at the extensive margin. Congestion charges may also affect labour market matching negatively, since generalized travel costs increase for many workers (depending on their value of time). In the ParryBento model, it is the income tax wedge that is the root of the problem, but such problems may also be caused or exacerbated by the presence of (external) agglomeration effects. Arnott (2007) points out that agglomeration externalities may imply that the level of the optimal congestion tax is below the corresponding congestion externality costs. 39 The quantitative estimates in Parry and Bento (2001) rest on the assumption that an increase in travel costs caused by congestion charges will have similar effects on labour supply as an increase of income taxes. general finding in labour economics is that income tax changes have the greatest impact on labour supply at the extensive margin, rather than at the intensive margin or through matching effects (Kleven and Kreiner, 2006). However, it is not obvious that introducing congestion charges affects labour supply in the same way that an increased income tax would do. In our view, it seems unlikely that charge on car drivers in urban cores during rush hours would lead to an appreciable fraction of this population segment choosing to leave the labour force (i.e. adjust at the extensive margin), especially in European conditions where typically large majority of the low-skilled workers use other modes than car for commuting trips to central areas during rush hours. Effects on matching (or “destination choice” in transport model terminology) and working hours seem to be more plausible adaptations. If travellers have heterogeneous the values of time, then the standard analysis of congestion charges will typically underestimate the benefits of the policy. This was pointed out already by Vickrey (1969), but at the time, the understanding of value-of-time heterogeneity as limited, and few attempts were made to analyse what this meant for the quantitative results. Verhoef and Small (2004) give detailed analysis of the issue. Proper estimation of value-of-time distributions, together with socioeconomic explanatory variables, have been made possible only recently (Fosgerau, 2006, 2007; Börjesson et al., forthcoming). In this paper, we use the results from the Swedish Value of Time study, which was the first to successfully identify the full value-of-time distribution (Börjesson et al., forthcoming; Börjesson and Eliasson, 2011). 2.3 The Stockholm congestion charging system The City of Stockholm has around 0.8 million inhabitants, and is the central part of the Stockholm county, with total of million inhabitants. Around 2/3 of the City inhabitants live within the toll cordon, and the rest outside the cordon. Because of its topology, with lots of water and well-preserved green wedges, road congestion levels in Stockholm are high compared to the city’s moderate size. Before the introduction of the congestion charges, the main roads arterials leading to, from and within the city centre had congestion indices typically averaging around 200% (i.e. three times the free-flow travel time). The Stockholm congestion charging system consists of toll cordon around the inner city (Figure 1), thereby reducing traffic through the main bottlenecks located at the arterials leading into the inner city. The cost of passing the cordon between 6.30 and 18.30 weekdays is 20 SEK (approx. 2€) during peak hours (7:30–8:30, 16:30–18:00), 15 SEK during the shoulders of the peaks (30 min before and after peak period) and 10 SEK during the rest of the charged period. The charges were introduced in January 2006, and have reduced traffic across the cordon by 22% during charged hours, with considerable reductions in congestion levels as consequence. The effects have stayed remarkably stable, increasing somewhat over time when controlling for inflation and growth in 40 population and car ownership (Börjesson et al., 2010). Eliasson (2009a) provides cost-benefit analysis of the charges based on measurements of traffic flows and travel times, calculating the value of travel time benefits to around 60 M€ per year. This can be compared to gross revenues of around 80 M€ per year. The CBA uses standard transport appraisal framework, and hence explicitly excludes “wider economic benefits” (or losses) in the form of labour market effects apart from what is captured by work trip consumer surplus. The present study hence complements the standard CBA in Eliasson (2009a). Travel time benefits were calculated to be split in approximately equal shares between commuting trips, leisure trips, business trips and freight transport (the two latter categories are smaller in terms of traffic volumes but have higher values of time). The calculations were based on uniform value of time for each traffic category, and are hence likely to underestimate the true benefits. The system, its history and its effects have been described in detail elsewhere. description of the system and its effects can be found in Eliasson et al. (2009), and experiences from the design and evaluation processes are described in (2009b). Eliasson (2008) summarises the main lessons in terms of design, effects, acceptability and political process. detailed account of the political process can be found in Gullberg and Isaksson (2009). Figure 1. The Stockholm congestion charging system. The dashed line is the charging cordon, the dots are charging points and the solid line is the non-charged Essinge bypass. 2.4 Modeling the relationship between income and accessibility In this section, we will estimate relationship between labour income and workplace accessibility. Compared to many similar relationships reported in the literature, the model estimated here differs in five ways: 1. It is estimated on differences across time rather than cross-sectional data, thereby reducing the endogeneity problems that riddle crosssectional studies of accessibility/productivity relationships. After all, 41 2. 3. 4. 5. correlation does not prove causality. If it is observed that highly productive people and firms are more common in high-accessibility locations is this because productive people and firms choose to locate in such places (which they may do for several reasons), or have they been made productive by the high-accessibility location? It is only the latter mechanism that is relevant if we want to use an estimated relationship to calculate accessibility benefits of an improvement in the transport system. The model used here reduces this problem by relating changes in income to changes in accessibility. To further reduce endogeneity problems and isolate the impact of changes in the transport system, the change in accessibility is decomposed into one part capturing the change in employment in each zone, and one part capturing only the change in generalized travel costs. It is the latter part that is used to model the impact of the congestion charges. It is estimated on “quasi-disaggregate” data. The entire population is divided into segments based on location and socioeconomic characteristics, and the average labour income is calculated for each such segment. One such segment then constitutes one observation. It is based on accessibility measures from transport model, rather than density or size measures. If we want to capture the increase in agglomeration effects due to transport investment, the measure of agglomeration needs to be sensitive to changes in the transport system, which size or density measures typically are not. It also has the benefit that the accessibility measures are based on actual commuting behaviour and actual, perceived generalized costs. Finally, it is an aggregation across all modes based on actual mode shares. Generalized travel costs account for heterogeneity in the value of travel time. This turns out to be crucial for results. traveller with high value of time will perceive that his generalized travel cost is reduced by congestion charges, and vice versa. Ignoring this heterogeneity would mean that one of the foremost benefits of congestion charges is ignored that it “sorts” trips into high-value and low-value trips, and reduces the latter while prioritizing the former. The income/accessibility relationship is different depending on the value of travel time of the segment. This also turns out to be important. Segments with higher value of time (which is correlated with higher income, although this is not the only factor) turn out to have much larger income/accessibility elasticity than segments with low values of time. This is natural, considering that the former segments are typically higher educated and more specialized, and hence typically experience steeper wage gradient when accepting longer commuting radius. Model specification The entire working population in the study area (4 million workers in Sweden, 1.8 million in the Mälaren Valley) is divided into segments, where each segment is combination of age (7 categories), gender (2), ethnic origin (3), educational level (4) and residential municipality (290 for Sweden, 86 for the Mälaren 42 Valley). The average income5 for each segment is observed for the years 1993 and 2002. This is regressed on initial accessibility (year 1985) and changes in accessibility, one part due to changes in the transport system (1985-1997) and one part due to changes in employment per zone (1993-2002). The choice of years is mainly matter of data availability: in particular, getting detailed data on historical transport systems is major effort6 Let E0s be the number of workplaces in municipality s at time (1985). c0rs is the generalized travel cost between municipality r and s at time (described below), and is sensitivity parameter estimated in the transport model (see below). Workplace accessibility of municipality r at time is then defined as = exp ) The accessibility change due to changes in generalized travel costs is based on the travel cost change 1985-1997, using employment data from 1993. The change in accessibility due to changes in generalized travel costs is defined as = E exp( E exp( ) ) c0rs and c2rs are generalized costs in the years 1985 and 1997. E1s is the employment in municipality s in 1993. The accessibility change due to employment changes is based on the employment change 1993-2002, using generalized travel costs from 1985. The change in workplace accessibility due to changes in employment per zone is defined as exp( exp( = ) ) is the number of workplaces in municipality s in the year 1993, while the corresponding number in the year 2002. is With these variables, we can estimate model for average income y3nr of segment and zone at time (2002). Note that the income at time (1993) is also included. log( ) log( log( ) ) log( ) log( ) “Income” means wage before taxes, excluding wage overhead costs. We have also tested using income and employment data for the years 1985 and 1997, i.e. for the same years as travel costs, with generally similar results. 5 6 43 The :s are vectors of dummy variables, and 2- 5 are the corresponding parameter vectors. Later on, we will differentiate the accessibility variables by value of time. Above, we used generalized travel costs between municipalities. But the transport model works with traffic zones, which are much smaller: typical sizes are in the order of 0.1-1 km2 in built-up areas. Let cijm be generalized travel cost between traffic zones and with mode m where bijm is the monetary travel cost, the value of time, and tijm is the generalized travel time (where waiting times and access times are weighted differently than in-vehicle time). Relative time weights are taken from the traffic model LuTrans LuTrans is large-scale transport model, version of the national transport model SAMPERS (Algers and Beser, 2001) downscaled in certain respects (primarily in the number of socioeconomic groups). Generalized costs depend on the value time in two ways. Obviously, the value of time enters the definition. But car travel costs and travel times in fact also depend on the value of time, especially when road pricing is introduced, since the route choice will be different depending on the value of time: drivers with low value of time will be more willing to take detours to avoid tolls. To account for this, segments are grouped into three equally sized categories according to their value of time. The value of time for each category is taken to be the median value of the lower, middle and upper third of the lognormal value-of-time distribution estimated in the national Value of Time study (Börjesson and Eliasson, 2011). For each origin zone, the share of the population belonging to each value of time category is calculated, based on income, the number of children and whether the zone is in Stockholm county (again using results from Börjesson and Eliasson (2011)). Separate travel cost and travel time matrices are then calculated for each category, by running the LuTrans model using the three value-of-time categories in the network assignment step. To calculate the generalized travel cost between municipalities r and s generalized travel costs between traffic zones are weighted with traveling flows Tijm. These are taken from the traffic model LuTrans = The notation means that summation is taken over all traffic zones belonging to municipality r Estimation results Estimation results are reported in Table 1. All models are estimated using OLS. Model [1] is estimated on all of Sweden, without accounting for heterogeneity in 44 the value of time. The estimated elasticity of labour income with respect to initial accessibility (log M0r), is 0.0447 while the estimate for the change in accessibility due to changes in the transport system (log cMr is slightly lower, 0.03. The estimate for the change in accessibility due to changes in zonal employment has no significant effect. These elasticities are in the expected range; for example, Graham and van Dender (2011) state that studies relating productivity to city size have typically yielded elasticities in the range 0.02-0.10; Venables (2007) give similar range of 0.04-0.11. But as Graham and van Dender (2011) point out, such aggregate elasticities are likely to be subject to confounding and endogeneity effects. The estimation results presented here attempts to control for these effects at least to some extent controlling for initial accessibility and the change in the number of workplaces. The estimated effect on final income from initial accessibility can be interpreted as capturing the effect that high-income workplaces and people tend to move to highaccessibility locations. Not controlling for this would then be source of endogeneity bias. Some of the estimation results indicate that there is unexplained heterogeneity: in particular, the influence of initial income is conspicuously low one would expect strong correlation between initial income and income in the next time period. The socioeconomic variables show expected results: income increases faster for middle-age, male, high-education and native-Sweden segments. Model [2] is estimated only on municipalities in the Mälaren Valley Region, which includes the Greater Stockholm region. While all parameters for individual (segment) characteristics are very similar to [1], it can be noticed that larger effects are indicated with respect to general accessibility and transport-induced change in accessibility. This outcome is expected, as this region includes the largest labour market region in Sweden, with better opportunities for matching in the labour market than in other regions. This result also implies that it can be questioned whether the elasticities are constant over the sample. Model [3] is also estimated on Mälaren Valley only, but the generalized costs in the accessibility variables have been adjusted. Instead of using single value of travel time taken from the transport model (as in [1] and [2]), the value of time is different across segments. Segments are grouped into three value-of-time categories as explained above, so the generalized travel cost will be different for each segment. As result the elasticity increases from 0.044 to 0.053, while the standard error is unchanged. This suggests that taking differences in the value of travel time into account makes the generalized travel cost variable more precise. However, this makes the assumption of constant elasticities across the sample even more questionable. Models [4a]-[4c] are separate models for each value-of-time category. Due to collinearity number of dummy variables for segment characteristics have been omitted in these equations. The estimates indicate that the elasticity with 7 This is about the same size as related estimate for UK, reported in Venables (2007). 45 respect to initial accessibility M0r and with respect to transport-induced accessibility change cMr increases considerably with the value of time. This confirms the expectation that workers with high income and higher education tend to have better opportunities to benefit from the variety and specialization offered by larger labour market. Moreover, the correlation between initial income and final income is now much higher, also indicating better model fit. Table Estimated income equations for workers in Sweden and Mälaren Valley. Dependent variable: log(income) 2002 (average per segment). Model specification [1] Geographical region Sweden [2] Mälaren Valley [3] Mälaren Valley [4a] Mälaren Valley All All All Low VoT Log Income 1993 0.282 0.328 0.324 0.671 0.823 0.947 0.013 0.025 0.025 0.021 0.034 0.027 Male 0.250 0.237 0.237 0.163 0.063 0.030 0.005 0.009 0.009 0.015 0.006 0.008 Age 21-30 0.520 0.480 0.484 0.028 -0.009 -0.013 0.016 0.031 0.031 0.014 0.010 0.018 Age 31-40 0.686 0.661 0.665 0.120 0.040 0.145 0.018 0.035 0.035 0.015 0.009 0.015 Age 41-50 0.775 0.745 0.749 0.209 0.085 0.158 0.019 0.037 0.037 0.016 0.009 0.015 Age 51-60 0.792 0.750 0.753 0.231 0.120 0.151 0.019 0.037 0.037 0.015 0.010 0.015 Age 61-70 0.596 0.562 0.566 0.017 0.034 0.034 Age 71+ 0.257 0.223 0.224 0.017 0.027 0.026 Secondary education 0.120 0.107 0.107 0.004 0.006 0.006 Tertiary education < 3 years 0.128 0.121 0.121 0.004 0.007 0.007 Tertiary education 0.273 0.272 0.272 0.006 0.012 0.011 Native Sweden 0.130 0.148 0.149 0.030 0.095 0.136 0.004 0.006 0.006 0.010 0.008 0.010 Native other Nordic 0.120 0.131 0.131 0.051 0.070 0.121 0.005 0.007 0.007 0.012 0.009 0.014 0.044 0.051 0.052 0.019 0.024 0.037 0.001 0.002 0.002 0.005 0.003 0.003 -0.006 -0.110 -0.104 0.080 0.001 -0.036 0.024 0.054 0.054 0.136 0.070 0.088 0.030 0.044 0.053 0.025 0.029 0.062 0.004 0.006 0.006 0.016 0.008 0.011 4.108 3.730 3.749 2.239 1.159 -0.015 0.073 0.134 0.133 0.160 0.246 0.200 0.904 14817 0.909 5232 0.910 5232 0.758 1744 0.475 1744 0.713 1744 VoT Segment 3 years 0 Log M r Log E Mr Log cMr Constant 2 R Number of observations [4b] Mälaren Valley Medium VoT [4c] Mälaren Valley High VoT Note: Standard errors (White heteroskedasticity-consistent) are reported under parameters; estimates in bold are significant at the 95%-level; omitted categories for dummy variables are Female, Age<21, Primary education, and non-Nordic native country. 46 2.5 Effects of congestion charges on Labour income With the model described above, we can simulate the effects on aggregate labour income of the introduction of the congestion charges. Accessibility measures with and without the congestion charges are calculated using the transport model LuTrans The changes in travel times due to the charges are calibrated against travel time measurements from the situations before and after the congestion charges (spring 2005 compared to spring 2006). Then, the elasticities of labour income with respect to transport costs-related change in accessibility (from models [4]-[6]) are used to assess the change in labour income. Obviously, these effects do not happen at once: the calculation results are indicative of what can be expected in the long run (such as the ten-year period the estimation results are based on). Figure illustrates the variation of the value of time the colours show the share of the population in each zone belonging to the “high” value of time category. Figure 2. map of value-of-time variation: share of inhabitants belonging to the “high” value-of-time category. The inner city of Stockholm is situated in the middle of the map. 47 Table shows the calculated change in labour income for each municipality and value of time category. Note that whether the accessibility (and hence labour income) increases or decreases varies with the value of time. For high values of time, the decreased travel time is worth more than the increased travel cost, and vice versa for low values of time. The sign of the accessibility change also varies with location. For several municipalities, accessibility increases even for the middle value of time category. One reason for this is network effects: when traffic decreases all over the county, even many travellers that do not pay the charge benefit from reduced congestion. Table 2005. The congestion tax system in Stockholm: Estimated effects on wage sum in VTT category, share of Effect on wage sum by VTT category workers in municipality Municipality Danderyd Low Medium 0.275 0.336 High Low Medium High Total Per capita Total Per capita Total Per capita MSEK 1000 SEK MSEK 1000 SEK MSEK 1000 SEK 0.388 -3.3 -0.9 -3.6 -0.8 39.0 7.5 Stockholm 0.274 0.340 0.386 -14.7 -0.1 -31.3 -0.2 481.1 3.3 Nacka 0.292 0.338 0.370 -7.6 -0.7 -12.5 -0.9 42.5 2.9 Lidingö 0.299 0.339 0.362 -2.5 -0.4 -0.4 -0.1 18.0 2.6 Täby 0.283 0.334 0.384 -3.7 -0.4 -0.6 -0.1 24.5 2.2 Sollentuna 0.280 0.339 0.381 -0.9 -0.1 -0.8 -0.1 20.5 1.9 Järfälla 0.312 0.341 0.347 -0.7 -0.1 2.3 0.2 18.3 1.8 Solna 0.378 0.342 0.280 -7.2 -0.6 -12.2 -1.2 14.4 1.7 Sundbyberg 0.366 0.344 0.290 -2.3 -0.4 -4.2 -0.7 8.0 1.6 Huddinge 0.300 0.340 0.360 -1.3 -0.1 -2.0 -0.1 22.6 1.5 Upplands Väsby 0.314 0.343 0.344 -0.9 -0.2 -0.5 -0.1 7.2 1.1 Tyresö 0.283 0.340 0.376 -1.6 -0.3 -2.7 -0.4 7.3 1.0 Ekerö 0.256 0.340 0.404 -0.8 -0.3 -0.1 0.0 4.2 0.9 Värmdö 0.267 0.339 0.394 -1.4 -0.3 -1.4 -0.2 5.6 0.8 Vaxholm 0.273 0.339 0.388 -0.1 -0.1 0.4 0.2 1.5 0.7 Upplands-Bro 0.314 0.345 0.341 -0.2 -0.1 0.7 0.2 2.4 0.7 Botkyrka 0.327 0.342 0.331 -1.5 -0.1 -0.7 -0.1 7.1 0.6 Vallentuna 0.278 0.341 0.381 -0.3 -0.1 0.8 0.2 3.3 0.6 Österåker 0.272 0.338 0.391 -0.1 0.0 1.2 0.2 3.9 0.5 Haninge 0.313 0.343 0.344 -2.2 -0.2 -2.9 -0.2 5.0 0.4 Salem 0.280 0.341 0.379 -0.2 -0.1 -0.1 0.0 1.0 0.4 Sigtuna 0.314 0.344 0.343 -0.2 0.0 0.9 0.1 1.5 0.2 Norrtälje 0.331 0.345 0.324 0.2 0.0 0.1 0.0 1.4 0.2 Södertälje 0.339 0.343 0.318 -0.3 0.0 0.4 0.0 1.3 0.1 Nynäshamn 0.322 0.345 0.334 -0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.4 0.1 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 Nykvarn 0.272 0.344 0.384 0.0 Total 0.294 0.340 0.366 -54.0 48 -69.0 741.9 The main conclusion is that the aggregate effect on labour income is in fact positive, totalling 60 M€/year8 This is far from obvious, and it is impossible to know whether this should be expected to be general result. Intuitively, groups with high values of time get increased accessibility, while groups with low values of time get decreased accessibility. Some travellers may also gain accessibility due to network effects (“spillback” of congestion reductions). The aggregate change in accessibility may be either positive or negative. But the model estimations showed that changes in accessibility affects labour income more for high-income groups than for low-income group. This is intuitively plausible, since high values of time are correlated with high income and high education, and such groups generally get higher wage premiums for increasing work trip length. Hence, one may have positive effects on labour income even if aggregate accessibility decreases. As we argued at the outset, the sign of labour income effects is an empirical question. In this case study, the effect on labour income turned out to be positive. This is an interesting finding, since the literature on labour market effects of congestion charges have often concluded that these will be negative, usually on the basis of simplified theoretical models. Our results show that reverse results may be obtained once the model allows for network effects, heterogeneity in values of time, and heterogeneity in the relationship between accessibility and labour income for different income/education segments. Allowing for the two types of heterogeneity (in the value of time and in the relationship between accessibility and income) is crucial. If model [2] is used, where the travel costs and accessibility effects do not vary with the value of time, the aggregate income effect changes from +62 M€/year to -17 M€/year. Obviously, the size of the income effect should be regarded with caution for several reasons. In particular, estimations of income/accessibility relationships tend to be riddled with confounding and endogeneity bias. Results do suggest, however, that the aggregate income effect from the Stockholm congestion charges are positive and of considerable magnitude. A comparison with an increased fuel tax It is illuminating to compare the effects of the congestion charging system with the effects of fuel tax, designed to give the same tax revenues. In contrast to the congestion charges, this does not give any appreciable travel time savings, so accessibility decreases for all groups. Consequently, the fuel tax has quite different consequences for labour income. The size of the decrease varies between municipalities and between value-oftime categories in the same municipality. This variation can mainly be explained by the variation in the car modal share, which is linked to variation in land use pattern and supply of public transport. 8 This includes the negative effect on the “low” value-of-time category, which is based on an insignificant parameters estimate. Excluding this effect would increase the total effect and hence strengthen the general conclusion. 49 While the congestion tax was estimated to increase labour income with over 60 M€/year, the fuel tax is estimated to decrease labour income with nearly 95 M€/year. On average, the estimated effect of the fuel tax is reduction of wage sum by around 0.4% in each VTT category. However, there is considerable variation between municipalities; the decrease in labour income is estimated to vary between 0.1% and 1.1%. 2.6 Conclusions In the standard theoretical model, it is clear that congestion charges will generate social surplus. As shown in several studies (e.g. (Eliasson, 2009a)), this will often also hold in the real world, even when technical costs have to be covered and practical considerations place restrictions on the design of the charges. But in an economy with labour market imperfections such as distortive taxation and agglomeration benefits, the “wider economic” effects of congestion charges not captured by standard transport CBA may be negative. As shown by e.g. (Parry and Bento, 2001), these negative effects may be so large that they cancel the positive social surplus on the transport market. But the real effects of congestion charges are complex and the mechanisms work in different directions. Increased travel costs may reduce matching and labour participation; improved travel times work in the opposite direction, and may also increase working hours; different groups have different values of time, so the sign of the change in generalized travel costs may be different for different groups; and different groups will have different wage premiums with respect to commuting radius and hence different relationships between accessibility and income. This means that the sign of labour market effects is an empirical question, likely to be different between different economic and geographical conditions. In this paper, we have assessed this by estimating relationship between accessibility and income. The relationship takes differences in values of travel time into account, and also that the income/accessibility elasticity may be different for different groups. The estimation shows that categories with high value of time have considerably stronger relationship between accessibility and income than low value-of-time groups. Accessibility measures are constructed using output and parameters from large-scale transport model, making them consistent with observed travel behaviour. Previous studies on labour market effects have often assumed that the reaction to congestion charges will be similar to the reaction of change in income tax. Instead, we use accessibility measures ultimately derived from observed travel behaviour, through large-scale transport model. Applying the estimated relationship to the Stockholm congestion charges, we concluded that the labour market effects were in fact positive, amounting to around 60 M€/year. This can be compared with gross revenues, which are around 80 M€/year, the net consumer surplus, which is around -28 M€/year, and the net social benefit (net of investment costs) of standard CBA, which is 50 around 65 M€/year (all figures are taken from (Eliasson, 2009a)). Hence, in this case, labour market effects do not cancel the social surplus from transport effects; in fact, they add significantly to it. Note, though, that the whole labour income effect cannot be added to the transport CBA part of it is captured by the work trip travel time benefits in the CBA, which accounts for around quarter of the total travel time benefits. 51 2.7 References Algers, S., Beser, M., 2001. 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Journal of Urban Economics 51, 339-365. Pilegaard, N., Fosgerau, M., 2008. Cost Benefit Analysis of Transport Improvement in the Case of Search Unemployment. Journal of Transport Economics and Policy 42, 23-42. Redding, S.J., Venables, A.J., 2004. Economic geography and International Inequality. Journal of International Economics 62, 53-82. Rosenthal, S.S., Strange, W.C., 2004. Evidence on the nature and sources of agglomeration economies, in: Handbook of Regional and Urban Economics. Elsevier, pp. 2119-2171. Venables, A.J., 2007. Evaluating urban transport improvements: cost-benefit analysis in the presence of agglomeration and income taxation. Journal of Transport Economics and Policy 41, 173-188. Verhoef, E.T., Small, K.A., 2004. Product Differentiation on Roads: Constrained Congestion Pricing with Heterogeneous Users. Journal of Transport Economics and Policy 38, 127-156. Westin, J., 2011a. Welfare Effects of Road Pricing in Population with Continuously Distributed Value of Time. 53 Westin, J., 2011b. Labor Market Responses to Congestion Charges. Vickrey, W.S., 1969. Congestion Theory and Transport Investment. The American Economic Review 59, 251-260. 54 3 How to evaluate the welfare effects of congestion charges? Jonas Westin, KTH Royal Institute of Technology Abstract Interactions between the transport market and other interconnected markets can have large effect on the welfare of road pricing policy or congestion charge. An argument in the road pricing literature is therefore that the way the revenues from road toll are recycled is crucial for the overall welfare of the policy. Using simple general equilibrium model we show that differences in the relative efficiency of different revenue recycling policies, especially for marginal toll policies, are more related to the initial model assumptions regarding the initial situation than being direct feature of the road toll per se. For nonmarginal toll policies, interactions between the road toll and the other policy instruments also need to be considered in the welfare analysis. The contribution of the paper is to analyze how the welfare congestion charge under different revenue recycling polices depends on whether the policy is analyzed in balanced (optimal) or an unbalanced (not optimal) tax system. The paper also extends previous research by also studying the effect of nonmarginal policies. 3.1 Introduction Background Interactions, both between the transport market and other interconnected markets, and between different transport modes, can have large effect on the welfare of road pricing policy such as congestion charge. Welfare may therefore depend as much on indirect effects in other markets, as on direct effects in the transport market. The full effect of road pricing policy can therefore differ significantly from the effect predicted by first-best analysis that ignores the spillover effects in other markets (Parry and Bento, 2002). To analyze the welfare effect of road pricing policies, research literature has emerged where general equilibrium models are used to capture interactions between road pricing and pre-existing distortions in other interconnected markets. One market that has been given special attention in this literature is the labor market. The main argument is that since road pricing policy, such as congestion charge, may raise the cost of work related commuting, it will decrease employment at the extensive margin in similar way as raised income tax. Parry and Bento (2001) even argue that the resulting losses in the labor market from the road toll may exceed the welfare gain from the reduced congestion externality in the transport market. However, if the collected toll 55 revenues are used to reduce other distortionary taxes, such as the labor tax, double dividend can arise where the road pricing policy both increases welfare in the transport market, and in the market where the distortionary tax is reduced. The literature is hence related to the double-dividend debate and the idea that it sometimes can be optimal from welfare perspective to tax negative externalities higher than the partial equilibrium Pigouvian level, given that the revenues are used to cut distortions elsewhere in the economy (see Bovenberg 1999; Parry and Oates 2000; Ballard and Don Fullerton 1992; Schwartz and Repetto 2000; and Kim 2002). An argument that is often found in the road pricing literature is therefore that the way the revenues from congestion charge are recycled is crucial for the overall welfare of the policy (Parry and Bento 2001; Van Dender 2003; De Borger and Wuyts 2009; Fosgerau and Van Dender 2010). One reason for this is that the value of the collected revenues often is larger than the value (in monetary terms) of the time gains from the reduced congestion. During the Stockholm congestion charging trial in 2006, the value of the shorter travel times were for example estimated to be around two thirds of the collected toll revenues (Eliasson 2009). Comparing different revenue recycling schemes; labor tax cut is in general preferred to lump-sum transfer, unless equity considerations are explicitly included in the social welfare function as in Mayeres and Proost (2001). The argument is related to the weak double-dividend claim, that an environmental tax in general improves welfare more if the revenues are returned through cuts in other distortionary taxes compared to being returned in lump-sum transfer (see Goulder 1995; and Bovenberg 1999). Using simple analytical model, Parry and Bento (2001) also find that the efficiency gains are larger if the toll revenues are recycled through reduced labor taxes than if the revenues are spend on increased public transport subsidies. An opposite result is however found in De Borger and Wuyts (2009) who argue that since labor tax cut and an increased public transport subsidy have very different effects on congestion, it may be more efficient to recycle the revenues via targeted public transport subsidy, than to use the revenues for general reduction of distortionary labor taxes. Interactions between different transport modes therefore complicate the analysis. The economy of scale in the public transport system can for instance be important for the overall welfare from policy that induces modal-shift from car to public transport. troublesome implication of the conflicting results in previous studies are that the estimated welfare effect and the relative efficiency of different revenue recycling policies depend, not only on which markets that are included in the analysis, but also on how the interactions between different transport modes are modeled. However, as pointed out by Rouwendal and Verhoef (2006), since many of the needed relationships can be hard to measure, the optimal toll level as well as the total welfare effect can be hard to assess empirically. 56 This has given rise to the question of how to evaluate the welfare effect of road toll or congestion charge, especially in situations when it is uncertain how the collected revenues are going to be spent? The question has practical implications when it comes to how the welfare effects from road pricing policy or congestion charge should be evaluated. If the chosen form of revenue recycling is important for the overall welfare of the policy, then the revenues recycling scheme must be included in the welfare analysis. If the chosen form of revenue recycling is of less importance, simplified analysis using short-cut rules may be enough. The contribution of the paper to the literature is to analyze how the relative efficiency of different revenue recycling polices depends on assumptions regarding the initial tax system. The paper also extends previous research by also studying the effect of non-marginal policies. Conceptual Approach The purpose of this paper is to study how interactions in the transport market and other interconnected markets as well as interactions between the congested road and the public transport system can affect the welfare effect of congestion charge under number of different revenue recycling schemes. In the study we both analyze marginal and non-marginal road pricing policies. To analyze the welfare effects of yet non-existing road pricing policy, we need to specify starting point from which to make the analysis, that is, the initial values of policy instruments such as taxes, tolls and transfers. The choice of starting point is important, especially when comparing different revenue recycling polices, since it has large impact on the relative welfare effect of the compared recycling policies. In the analysis, we will study the effect of introducing new road toll on congested road. Hence, we consider situation where the government previously was restricted from road tolls (by technical, political or other reasons) but could choose the remaining policy instruments freely, subject only to the governmental budget constraint. The remaining policy instruments can either be chosen by specifying values for each instrument individually, or being integrated in larger model calibration procedure where both the policy instruments and the model parameters are simultaneously chosen with respect to the whole model behavior. Since many policy instruments give rise to distortions, we need to make distinction between initial situations where the distortions are balanced and situations where they are unbalanced. That is, whether social welfare is maximized in the constrained initial situation or not Outline The paper starts with theoretical background where the model is presented together with an analysis of the welfare effects of road pricing policy under different revenue recycling schemes. In the following section, three numerical experiments are conducted to analyze the welfare effect of both marginal and non-marginal toll policies, each using the same model but starting from 57 different initial situations. The last section summarizes the results and discusses implications for policy analysis. 3.2 The model To model the welfare effect of road pricing under different revenue recycling schemes, modified version of the model presented in Parry and Bento (2001) is used. We model static economy where homogenous population, modeled as single representative agent, chooses labor supply and mode of transport to get to work. In the model, simple traffic model is embedded in general equilibrium framework. The agent gets utility from private consumption of composite commodity, leisure, commuting and public good. Following Parry and Bento (2001) and Van Dender (2003) we assume that labor supply is chosen at the extensive margin and that the number of work trips is strictly complementary to labor supply.9 We also assume that the daily work hours are fixed, normalized to one and that the agent can choose labor supply at the extensive margin without restriction. To get to work, the agent can choose between three modes of transport; driving on congested road, using the public transport system and driving on non-congested road. difference between the model in this paper and the model in Parry and Bento (2001) is that we in this paper use logit function to spread traffic over the travel modes while Parry and Bento (2001) use CES demand function to do the same thing. The agent’s utility maximization problem The agent’s utility maximization problem is decomposed into two-stage problem. First the agent chooses labor supply to maximize utility conditional on chosen travel mode. Then the agent chooses the optimal mix of travel modes based on the indirect utilities for all three transport modes. The utility function conditional on travel mode ( ) ) ( is given by: ( ) (1) where is private consumption, is leisure, is public spending and is transport mode specific constant. The utility functions (. ) and (. ) are assumed to be quasi-concave, continuous, twice differentiable, strictly increasing and the same for all transport modes. The agent chooses consumption and leisure to maximize utility subject to the following time constraint: (1 + ) (2) where is the agent’s labor supply conditional on travel mode is the total time endowment in the analyzed period, and 1 + is the time requirement for one day of work and one commuting trip back and forth. The agent’s budget constraint is: 9 This implies that the number of work days is directly proportional to the number of work trips. 58 ] =[ (3) where is governmental lump-sum transfer, and is the daily net wage after income tax and cost for commuting where is the income tax, is the toll (or subsidy) for transport mode and is the commuting cost for the same mode. When maximizing utility, the agent takes the travel time public spending and the governmental transfer as exogenous. By inserting the constraints on time (2) and budget (3) into the conditional utility function (1) we can express utility as function of conditional labor supply for all transport modes with the constraint 0 From the first-order conditions for utility maximization, we get the following relationship between consumption and leisure: ( ) (1 + ( 0) = 0 ) =0 (4) (5) where = 0 if > 0 Solving (4) and (5) we can express the representative agent’s conditional indirect utility function and conditional labor supply given transport mode as function of the policy instruments ( ), and the travel time In the outer maximization problem, the agent chooses the optimal mix of travel modes. To capture that the agent prefers mix of travel modes,10 we use random utility framework similar to the framework in Anas and Kim (1996) and Anas and Liu (2007). Assuming that the preferences for certain transport mode is i.i.d. extreme value distributed, we can express the transport demand as logit probability, see Train (2003).11 The mode share for transport mode is: = (6) Note that public spending does not affect the mode choice since only utility differences have an effect on the choice probabilities and ( ) is identical for all transport modes. Since each work day requires one commuting trip, the total number of trips with mode is equal to: (7) where is the chosen number of work days conditional on travel mode and is the mode share for the same travel mode. Total labor supply is then equal to: = (8) From the properties of the logit-function, the indirect utility is finally given by: 10 Since the agent represent homogenous population, the agent’s mix of travel modes can be interpreted as the share of the population that chooses the different travel modes. 11 One interpretation of the probabilities is that the representative agent consists of large number of individuals with idiosyncratic taste constants for different travel modes. 59 ) = ln (9) We further assume that the agent works in competitive firm using labor as single input to produce the consumption good. The marginal product of labor is constant, independent of the chosen travel mode and normalized so that the price of one unit of the consumption good is equal to one. This let us suppress the equations for the firm from the general equilibrium model. We assume that the agent can choose between three transport modes; driving on congested road using public transport and driving on non-congested { } For the congested road, we use volume delay function road i.e. to capture the travel time as function of the total number of trips on the road ( ) (10) where the travel time on the congested road is an increasing function of the ( ) total number of trips, i.e. > 0. This implies that the average number of trips per day is assumed to be proportional to the total number of trips in the period. The travel times for public transport and for the non-congested road are assumed to be constant. The government’s welfare maximization problem To maximize social welfare12 the government controls several policy instruments. The government levies proportional tax on labor toll on the 13 congested road and subsidy on public transport . The tax on the noncongested road is normalized to zero, i.e. = 0.14 The toll and the subsidy are paid on per trip basis. The government also produces public good and have the option to give the agent lump-sum transfer We assume that the government cannot use lump-sum taxes, i.e 0 and that the tax, the toll, the subsidy and the public good are non-negative, i.e. 0 0 0 and 0 The government can choose the policy instruments freely subject to the following budget restriction: (11) To simplify the calculations we denote the collected revenues + From the agents utility maximization problem we can express indirect utility, total labor supply, the demand for travel, and the collected 12 Since the model only contains single representative agent and our primary interest is to compare different policies we use the indirect utility (9) as measure of social welfare. 13 To simplify the analysis we define the public transport subsidy as negative transport tax, i.e. Observe that we, without loss of generality, can normalize the tax on the third transport mode to zero, i.e. = 0 since in combination with and can serve as perfect substitute to the toll If we removed the non-congested road, such that the agent only could choose between the congested road and public transport, then the road toll and the subsidy in similar way would be perfect substitutes. This implies that we instead of using congestion charge could raise the income tax for everyone and compensate public transport commuters with an increased subsidy. 14 60 revenues as functions of the policy instruments time on the congested road ( ( and ) ( ) (12) (13) ) (14) ) ( ( and the travel ) ( Inserting (14) into (10) we obtain the travel time instruments: ( (15) (16) ) (17) as function of the policy ) (18) Assume now that the government wants to maximize social welfare given with the restriction that 0 The Lagrangian for the fixed road toll government’s (constrained) welfare maximization problem is then: ( ( ) 0) (19) ( ( ) ) The first-order conditions for welfare maximization are: + + + + =0 (20) + =0 (22) + + =0 =0 ( 0) = 0 )=0 ( =0 (21) (23) (24) (25) (26) Combining (24) with the utility function (1) we see that: where ( = = ( ) (27) is the marginal benefit of public spending 61 To further simplify the analysis we assume that the lump-sum transfer is zero in optimum. The argument for doing so is that the government uses distortionary taxes to finance public spending and that we assume that the marginal benefit of the public good is larger than the marginal benefit of the lump-sum transfer .15 Reformulating equation (20) and combining with (24): (28) we see that the marginal cost of public funds ( for labor tax in optimum, is equal to the marginal benefit of public spending ( ). From equation (22) we see in similar way that the marginal benefit of an increased public transport subsidy ( also is equal to (29) In optimum, this implies that the welfare effect of marginal change in any of the non-constrained policy instruments ( , is zero, given that the revenues are used to increase the production of the public good However, if the revenues from the increased labor tax are used on any of the constrained policy instrument ( , the welfare effect may differ from zero because of the Lagrange multipliers and in conditions (21) and (23). Revenue recycling and the welfare effects of road pricing Assume now that we have an initial situation where the government prior to the road pricing policy was restricted from using the road toll ( = 0), but has chosen the remaining policy instruments to maximize social welfare by balancing the distortions in the different markets. What is then the welfare effect of marginal increase of the road toll when the revenues are used to increase public spending through From the firstorder conditions (21) and (27) we see that: + + (30) The first term is the direct tax effect of increasing the road toll. Since the road toll increases the cost of commuting to work, this has negative welfare effect, i.e. < 0 The second term corresponds to the welfare gain from the reduced congestion. Given that the road toll increases the collected revenues, the third term is also positive. The total welfare effect of the policy is equal to the Lagrange multiplier The first two terms can be interpreted as the direct 15 In theory there are situations where it would be optimal with strictly positive lump-sum transfer > 0 This could for instance happen if the marginal benefit of the public good is negligible and there are other externalities that motivate the use of distortionary taxes (such as congestion charge to reduce congestion). 62 welfare effect of the road toll while the third term depends on the chosen form of revenue recycling. When the revenues are spend on increased public spending this term is equal to the marginal benefit of increased public spending multiplied by the marginal change in revenues, i.e. + What if the revenues instead are used to cut the labor tax or increase the public transport subsidy? Since and in the initial no-toll situation, the welfare effect (at the margin) is the same regardless whether the revenues are spend on labor tax cut an increased public transport subsidy or increased public spending through However, if the revenues are returned in lump-sum transfer the welfare effect can differ because of the multiplier 3.3 Numerical experiments In this section we use numerical model to analyze the welfare effect of congestion charge under five different revenue recycling policies. The purpose is both to illustrate how the relative performance of different revenue recycling schemes may depend on the policy instruments in the initial situation, and to analyze how interactions between different transport modes affect welfare for non-marginal toll levels. In the model, we will also analyze how the welfare maximizing choice of income tax, public transport subsidy, public spending and lump-sum transfer depends on the chosen road toll for non-marginal toll levels. To analyze how the efficiency of marginal road toll under different revenue recycling policies depends on the initial taxation level, we will perform three numerical experiments. In the first experiment we start from an initial situation where the government has maximized social welfare in the absence of the congestion charge. In the two subsequent experiments, we first study situation where the initial level of public transport subsidy is set below its welfare maximizing level and second, situation where the income tax is initially set above the welfare maximizing level for the no-toll situation. The last experiment therefore corresponds to the model in Parry and Bento (2001). Except for different starting points, the same model is used in all experiments. In the numerical model we assume that the agent has function. ( ) ( +( ) ) CES-type of utility (31) where is private consumption, is leisure, is public spending and is 16 transport mode specific constant. The parameter is equal to = where is the elasticity of substitution between consumption and leisure, is the agent’s marginal utility of the public good, and and are constants. For the congested road, we use linear volume delay function 16 As in previous section we assume that the constant is i.i.d. extreme value distributed. 63 (32) Inserting the constraints (2) and (3) into the utility function (31) and taking the derivative, we can calculate the demand for consumption and leisure as functions of the ratio between consumption and leisure = for the chosen travel mode Assuming we have an interior solution17 we get: ( ( )= )=( ( ) The conditional indirect utility (conditional on interior solution) is: ( ) ( ) (35) +( (33) ) ( ) chosen travel mode (34) and an ) Using equations (6), (8) and (9) we can then calculate the demand for each transport mode, total labor supply and social welfare. The model parameters in the example are shown in Table 3. Table 3: Model parameters in the numerical example Parameter Value 0.5 1.5 1.2 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.1 0.9 0.4 0.5 10 1.3 Starting from an optimal starting point In the first experiment, we consider the situation where the government, prior to the introduction of the road toll has chosen the income tax public transport subsidy lump-sum transfer and public good to maximize social welfare given the governmental budget constraint (11). The initial welfare maximization problem for the government can hence be formulated as follows: 17 0 64 (36) This implies that the government maximizes social welfare given the budget constraint (11) for congestion charge equal to zero. First we note that the optimal lump-sum transfer is zero since distortionary taxes are used to raise the money needed for public spending and the marginal benefit of the public good is higher than the marginal benefit of positive lump-sum transfer This implies that the government, if possible, would use lump-sum taxes instead of distortionary labor taxes to finance the public good Figure shows contour plot of social welfare as function of the income tax and the public transport subsidy with the lump-sum transfer set to zero and the public good given by the budget constraint (11). Since the public good is assumed to be non-negative, this places restriction on the set of possible policy parameters for which and This is illustrated in the figure by the white area in the lower right corner of the figure. The black dot highlights the welfare maximizing choice of income tax and public transport subsidy in the no-toll situation. We see that (in this example) social welfare is maximized in the no-toll situation with the income tax set to 0.18, public transport subsidy equal to 0.061, public good set to 0.45 and lump-sum transfer constrained to 0. Figure 3: Contour plot of social welfare as transport subsidy in the no-toll situation function of the income tax and the public From this optimal starting point we can then analyze the welfare effect of introducing road toll on the congested road under different revenue recycling policies. We will analyze five different recycling policies; the first policy is to use the revenues to lower the income tax the second policy is to increase the public transport subsidy the third is to increase the public good the forth is to return the additional revenues in lump-sum transfer and 65 the fifth recycling policy is to re-maximize the welfare maximization problem (36) given the new road toll Social welfare for the five recycling policies as function of the road toll is shown in Figure 4. Figure 4: Social welfare as function of the road toll for the five different revenue recycling policies starting from an optimal starting point where all policy instruments are chosen to maximize welfare in the no-toll situation First, we see that for marginal toll levels, the road toll has the same welfare effect, regardless if the revenues are used to lower the income tax increase the public transport subsidy or increase the consumption of the public good The first three recycling policies also give the same welfare gain as the fifth optimal readjustment policy. This stands in contradiction to the result from previous studies where the choice of recycling policy was found to have significant impact on the welfare effect of road toll. The only recycling policy that does not produce the same effect is the lump-sum transfer recycling policy (policy 4). The reason behind the difference is that we in this model experiment, compared to for instance the model in Parry and Bento (2001), have assumed that the government has maximized welfare even before the road toll became available. Since this implies that the marginal cost of public funds (e.g. the income tax in the initial situation is equal to both the marginal benefit of public spending (e.g. the public good and the marginal benefit of public transport subsidies (e.g. ), all three recycling schemes will increase welfare with the same amount for marginal toll levels. As could be seen from the analytical derivations, this is general result that holds for all models what starts in an optimal initial situation where the distortions are balanced. For non-marginal toll levels the results are more in line with the results in previous literature where the recycling policies were found to have different performance. From Figure we see that when the toll increases, social welfare increases more for both the lowered income tax recycling policy (policy 1) and 66 the increased public good (policy 3), compared to when the revenues are spend on increased public transport subsidies (policy 2). The reason, for this, is that road toll that reduces congestion also reduces the need (and potential benefit) from public transport subsidy. This is because part of the benefit from public transport subsidy comes from its ability to reduce the congestion externality by attracting commuters to switch from car to public transport. Recycling the revenues from congestion charge via an increased public transport subsidy will therefore lead to situation with an over-subsidized public transport system, given that the subsidy was set at its optimal level in the initial no-toll situation. The welfare gain from recycling the collected toll revenues through an increased public transport subsidy is therefore smaller than both the increased public good and the labor tax cut recycling policy. See Small (2004) for further discussion about interactions between road pricing and public transport. Comparing the income tax cut (policy 1) with the increased public good (policy 2) we see that the welfare gain for both policies in the example is similar. For toll levels below 0.23 social welfare is improved more if the toll revenues are spend on the public good and for toll levels above 0.23 welfare is higher for the income tax cut The cause for this behavior is that the road toll has two opposing effects. In particular for small toll levels, the road toll provides the government with new and inexpensive source of revenue that the government can use to increase the provision of the public good. The toll therefore initially decreases the average marginal cost of public funds. But the road toll also increases the distortions in the tax system by narrowing the tax base which increases the cost of raising revenues through the income tax. This implies that the marginal cost of public funds for the income tax increases. The relative efficiency of the two recycling policies therefore depends on which of the two effects that dominates. See for instance Bovenberg (1999) for an in depth discussion on the topic. The results are also sensitive to changes in the model parameters. 67 Figure 5: Marginal cost of public funds for the different policy instruments as of the road toll for three different revenue recycling policies function In Figure 5, the marginal costs (and benefits) for the income tax ( ), the public good ( ), the public transport subsidy ( and the congestion charge ( ), are shown as function of the toll level for the optimal readjustment policy (policy 5), the income tax cut recycling (policy 1) and the increased public good policy (policy 3). Since the tax system is balanced in the initial situation, the marginal costs and benefits for all non-constrained policy instruments ( , and are equal in the no-toll situation. As the road toll increases, the marginal cost of the congestion charge increases. For the remaining policy instruments, the effect depends on how the revenues from the road toll are recycled. If the revenues are used to increase the public good (policy 3), increases compared to If the revenues on the other hand is recycled through an income tax cut (policy 1), becomes lower than When the revenues are spend on both policy instruments, as in the optimal readjustment policy (policy 5), and continues to be equal for all toll levels This shows that we to maximize welfare in this example should spend the toll revenues one more than one policy instrument. The optimal toll level is found where intersects with The interactions between the policy parameters can also be examined by studying how the optimal choice of policy instruments change when road toll is introduced. From the constrained welfare maximization problem in (36) we can express the optimal level of income tax public transport subsidy public good and lump-sum transfer as functions of the chosen toll level Assuming that the income tax, public transit subsidy, public good and lump-sum transfer are at their welfare maximizing levels in the no-toll situation; how does the introduction of the congestion charge affect these 68 optimal levels? For the numerical example, the change in the optimal parameter levels as function of the road toll is shown in Figure 6.18 Figure 6: Change in optimal level of public good, public transport subsidy and income tax compared to the no-toll situation as function of the road toll First we see that the road toll decreases the optimal level of public transport subsidy which stresses the strong interplay between the two policy instruments. The road toll also initially increases the optimal level of public good since it provides the government with new and inexpensive source of revenue. For larger toll levels, the negative effect from the increased distortions outweighs the positive effect of the additional source of revenue. To compensate for the increased cost of collecting the public funds, the government therefore decreases public spending, hence the optimal level of public good decreases. Since the road toll increases the distortions in the tax system, the optimal level of income tax also decreases with the road toll. Starting from a non-optimal starting point In this section we will analyze two additional experiments where the initial levels for the policy instruments differs from the optimal level studied in the first experiment. In experiment number two, the public transport subsidy is set below the initial welfare maximizing level, corresponding to situation where the public transport system is under-subsidized in the initial no-toll situation. motivation for this scenario is that among other Parry and Small (2009) argue that even substantial levels of public transport subsidies can be efficient, even when they are financed with distortionary income taxes. Compared to the parameter setting in the first experiment, we set the public transport subsidy to zero and adjust the public good to keep the governmental budget (11) balanced. In the third experiment, we study situation where the income tax initially is too high compared to the welfare maximizing level in experiment 18 That is, we study et cetera. 69 number one. This means that the marginal cost of public funds in the no-toll situation is higher than the marginal benefit of public spending. The policy instruments for the experiments are summarized in Table 4. Table 4: Policy instruments in the initial situation for the three numerical experiments Parameter Experiment 1 Experimen 2 Experiment 3 0.18 0.18 0.25 0.061 0.00 0.061 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.45 0.52 0.65 0.00 0.00 0.00 Social welfare as function of the road toll for the first four revenue recycling policies is shown below. Since we do not start from an optimal starting point, we do not consider the optimal adjustment policy in these experiments. Figure shows the result from experiment two and Figure shows the result from experiment three. Figure 7: Social welfare as function of the road toll for different revenue recycling policies starting from situation with under-subsidized public transport in the no-toll situation 70 Figure 8: Social welfare as function of the road toll for different revenue recycling policies starting from situation with too high income tax compared to the welfare maximizing level in the no-toll situation 3.4 Discussion Comparing the three experiments we see that the initial choice of starting point has large impact on the relative efficiency of the analyzed revenue recycling policies for marginal toll levels. If we for example analyze model where the public transport system is under-subsidized in the initial situation, we will most likely come to the conclusion that welfare increases more at the margin, if the toll revenues are spend on increasing the public transport subsidy compared to lowering the income tax. This has however more to do with the initial model assumption that the public transport system is under-subsidized in the no-toll situation, and is not direct feature of the road toll per se. This also makes it problematic to draw any general conclusions about the relative efficiency of different revenue recycling policies, without explicitly including an analysis of the initial situation from which the road toll is introduced. The relative efficiency of different revenue recycling policies are therefore site specific and will in general depend on number of things, not the least which costs and benefits we include in the analysis. When analyzing the welfare effect of road toll revenue recycling policy, it might therefore be good idea to separate the direct welfare effect from the road toll from the indirect welfare effect from general adjustment in the tax system. For non-marginal policies, similar interaction patterns emerge in all three experiments. The increased public transport subsidy recycling policy is for larger toll levels less efficient than both the public good recycling policy and the income tax cut recycling policy. Comparing the tax cut (policy 1) with the increased public spending (policy 3) we also see that the ranking of the two recycling policies are sensitive to the choice of starting point. This highlights the difficulty of making general statements about the most efficient way of recycling the revenues from road toll as is sometimes seen in the literature. 71 The whole revenue recycling approach can also be criticized from much broader systems analytical perspective since it disregards the effect chosen recycling policy may have on subsequent policies and decisions. If congestion charging policy raises the cost of work related commuting, and this gives rise to welfare loss in the labor market, it is clear that this loss should be included in cost-benefit analysis of the policy. It is also clear that an appraisal of the collected toll revenues needs to be included in the CBA. However, it is not obvious that this appraisal should depend on the benefit of the particular project that the revenues are earmarked for. To assess the marginal welfare effect of recycling the revenues from congestion charge on project instead of project B, we need to know whether the non-selected project will be implemented anyway or not. Because if both projects will be implemented regardless of what we do, the marginal benefit is equal to the marginal cost of tax instrument that would have financed the projects instead of the congestion charge. Without this knowledge, it may be better to value the collected toll revenues more in terms of an “average” marginal cost of public funds, instead of the marginal cost of particular project or policy instrument. One illustration of this problem is the Stockholm congestion charges, where the collected toll revenues are earmarked for road investments (Eliasson et al. 2009). Because the road investments in Stockholm also are funded by other national tax revenues, there is risk that the revenues from the congestion charge reduce the regular funding from the national government. How we draw the boundary of the system that we analyze is therefore important for an analysis where we want to compare the relative efficiency of different revenue recycling polices. 3.5 Conclusions In the introduction we asked how the welfare effect of congestion charge or road toll should be evaluated, especially in situations when we do not know how the collected revenues are going to be spent. Assuming that the government has maximized social welfare in the no-toll situation, there exists subset of nonconstrained policy instruments with the same marginal benefit. If we further assume that public spending to some extent are financed through distortionary income taxes (i.e. the income tax is included in the subset), we can use the marginal cost of public funds for the income tax as proxy for the benefit of all non-constrained policy instruments in the subset. That is, we can do the analysis as if the marginal cost of public funds is equal to the marginal benefit of public spending. If the road toll is small compared to the rest of the economy, we can treat the change as marginal and therefore do not explicitly need to know how the revenues are going to be used within the subset of policy instruments. Instead we can just use the marginal cost of public funds to calculate the value of the collected revenues. 72 For larger non-marginal toll policies, the interactions between the road toll and the other policy instruments become more important. Does the road toll for instance reduce the need for public transport subsidies? Does the road toll increase the distortions in the tax system which makes it more expensive to collect money through the income tax? In this case we might consider lowering the income tax to compensate for the increased distortions. Or, if the distortions are small, then it might be more efficient to use the additional revenues to increase public spending since the road toll provides the government with new and relatively inexpensive source of revenue. If we are not at optimum initially, introducing road toll can give the government an opportunity to make corrections in the tax system. However, there might still be good idea to separate the welfare effect of the road toll from the welfare effect of general tax adjustment, not least because it is difficult to measure (and agree upon) all the costs and benefits in the whole tax system and hence whether we are at optimum or not initially. And also, if we create model with the assumption that the taxes in the initial situation are too high compared to the benefits of spending them, and then introduce road pricing policy only to find that it is more efficient to use the revenues to lower the taxes than to increase public spending, what have we actually learned? Without thorough analysis of what initial situation we are in, it might therefore make more sense to make the analysis as if the policy instruments in the initial no-toll situation at least to some extent are balanced and can be motivated on welfare maximizing principles. To conclude, the type of general statements about how the revenues from road toll should be spend to maximize welfare that can be found in the research literature is problematic since the relative efficiency of different recycling policies so strongly depend on the particular situation we analyze and what assumptions we make regarding the efficiency of the initial policy instruments. The analysis is also sensitive to what markets and interactions we include in the analysis and whether we, for instance, include distributional considerations in the welfare function or not. For non-marginal policies we also need to consider how the road toll shifts for instance the optimal level of taxes and subsidies. The interaction between the public transport subsidy and the road toll stand out in this analysis, but the results are sensitive to what interaction effects we include in the analysis and how these are modeled. 3.6 Acknowledgements The author wishes to thank Lars-Göran Mattsson, Jonas Eliasson, Marcus Sundberg, Roger Pyddoke and Mattias Lundberg for helpful comments and suggestions during the project. This research was financed by the Swedish Transport Administration (Trafikverket), the former Swedish Road Administration (Vägverket), the Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation Systems (VINNOVA), and the Centre for Transport Studies (CTS), which is gratefully acknowledged. 73 3.7 References Anas, A. Kim, I., 1996. General equilibrium models of polycentric urban land use with endogenous congestion and job agglomeration. Journal of Urban Economics 40, p.232-256(25). Anas, A. Liu, Y., 2007. regional economy, land use, and transportation model (ReluTran©): formulation, algorithm design, and testing. Journal of Regional Science 47(3), p.415-455. Ballard, C.L. Don Fullerton, 1992. Distortionary taxes and the provision of public goods. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 6(3), p.117-131. Bovenberg, A.L., 1999. Green tax reforms and the double dividend: An updated reader’s guide. International Tax and Public Finance 6(3), p.421-443. De Borger, B. Wuyts, B., 2009. Commuting, transport tax reform and the labour market: Employer-paid parking and the relative efficiency of revenue recycling instruments. Urban Studies 46(1), p.213 -233. Eliasson, J., 2009. cost-benefit analysis of the Stockholm congestion charging system. Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice 43(4), p.468-480. Eliasson, J. et al., 2009. The Stockholm congestion charging trial 2006: Overview of effects. Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice 43(3), p.240-250. Fosgerau, M. Van Dender, K., 2010. Road pricing with complication. OECD, International Transport Forum Available at: http://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:oec:itfaaa:2010/2-en. Goulder, L.H., 1995. Environmental taxation and the double dividend: reader’s guide. International Tax and Public Finance 2(2), p.157-183-183. Kim, S.R., 2002. Optimal environmental regulation in the presence of other taxes: The role of non-separable preferences and technology. 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Nonseparable utility and the double dividend debate: Reconsidering the tax-interaction effect. Environmental and Resource Economics 15(2), p.149-157. Small, K.A., 2004. 6. Road pricing and public transport. Road pricing: theory and evidence p.133. Train, K., 2003. Discrete choice methods with simulation first edition Cambridge University Press, New York. Van Dender, K., 2003. Transport taxes with multiple trip purposes. Scandinavian Journal of Economics 105(2), p.295-310. 74 4 Welfare Effects of Congestion Pricing in a Population with Continuously Distributed Value of Time Jonas Westin, KTH Royal Institute of Technology Abstract Interactions between the transport market and other distorted markets, such as the labor market, can have large impact on the overall welfare effect of road pricing policy. Many road pricing studies therefore try to incorporate effects from other distorted markets in the analysis. critical assumption in many of the previous analyses of congestion charges is that there only exists single value of time. This is somewhat surprising since one of the main features of congestion charge is that it sorts people related to their value of time, given the existence of feasible transport alternatives. The purpose of the paper is to analyze the labor market effect from congestion charge when commuters have continuously distributed value of time. In the paper, simple traffic model is embedded within general equilibrium framework where large number of heterogeneous individuals choose labor supply and mode of transportation. Using disaggregated demand model for the individuals’ choice of travel mode, the paper studies the distributional impact of different revenue recycling policies, and analyzes how the mode choice self-selection mechanism affects the total welfare effect of congestion charge. In stylized numerical example, the effect of three different revenue recycling polices are analyzed; lump-sum transfer, labor tax cut, and welfare maximizing readjustment policy. Contrary to the general conclusion in many previous studies, the paper finds that when the revenues from the congestion charge are recycled back to the population, the overall effect welfare effect is positive, regardless if the revenues are returned in lump-sum transfer or used to cut distortionary income taxes. For marginal toll levels, we also find that the total welfare effect of the congestion charge does not depend on the chosen form of revenue recycling. The distributional impact does however still depend on how the revenues are used. The congestion charge increases labor supply for the remaining car commuters, but decreases labor supply for the individuals that change from car to public transport because of the congestion charge. The effect on total labor supply is hence ambiguous and depends on how the revenues are recycled. When the revenues are used elsewhere in the economy, aggregate labor supply is found to be positive. This indicates that the negative effect on labor supply from congestion charge, found in many previous studies, might not generally hold. 75 4.1 Introduction In standard textbook analysis of congestion charges, Pigouvian taxes are used to adjust the price of car travel to its marginal social cost by incorporating the congestion externality and reducing the associated delays. When all prices in the economy are equal to their marginal costs, this pricing rule ensures welfare improving Pareto efficient solution. This result does however not necessarily hold if other interconnected markets in the economy are distorted, as pointed out by Rouwendal and Verhoef (2006). In response to this problem, research literature has emerged where interactions between the transport market and other distorted markets, such as the labor market, are studied. Since congestion charge may raise the cost of commuting to work, it can decrease employment at the extensive margin in similar way as an income tax. The actual welfare effects of transport policy can therefore be quite different from those predicted by first-best analysis that ignores the spillover effects in other distorted markets (Parry and Bento, 2002). It has even been shown that, without any form of revenue recycling, the resulting welfare loss from the decreased employment can exceed the Pigouvian welfare gain from internalizing the congestion externality (Parry and Bento, 2001). critical assumption in many of the previous cost-benefit analyses of congestion charges is that the whole population has single value of time. This is problematic since one of the main features of congestion charge is that it sorts people according to their value of time, given the existence of feasible transport alternatives. In this paper we will instead of using representative individual, consider population with continuous wage distribution and hence continuously distributed value of time. The main contribution of this paper compared to previous literature is that it studies the welfare effect and distributional impact of congestion charge in population with endogenous labor supply and heterogeneous value of time. In the paper simple traffic model is embedded within general equilibrium framework where large number of individuals choose labor supply at the extensive margin and mode of transportation. The disaggregate travel demand model makes it possible both to capture commuter heterogeneity and to analyze how mode choice self-selection affects the costs and benefits of the congestion charge under three different revenue recycling schemes. Special attention will also be given to the distributional impact of the analyzed policies. The model used in the paper is created with the Stockholm congestion charging scheme in mind, but the framework can be applied to any city with well developed public transport service. An important assumption in the model is that car commuting is faster than public transport and that there exists strong correlation between the value of time and choice of transport mode. The model may therefore not be applicable to cities where almost everyone commutes by public transport. In this paper the analysis is restricted to work related 76 commuting on single link, but the model framework can just as well be applied to multi regional spatial CGE model. The paper begins with theoretical background presenting different approaches for studying road pricing and congestion charges in distorted economy. The background serves as foundation for the analytical framework presented in the subsequent section. In this section we define the analytical model and examine some of its analytical properties. The theory is illustrated in numerical example where the welfare effect and distributional impact of congestion charge are analyzed. The paper ends with some concluding remarks. 4.2 Background Revenue recycling in a general equilibrium framework To analyze the interaction between the transport market and other distorted markets, an extensive literature has emerged where transport models are embedded within general equilibrium framework. The general equilibrium approach to road pricing is related to the double-dividend debate, the idea that it can sometimes be optimal to tax negative externalities higher than at the partial equilibrium Pigouvian level, if the revenues are used to cut distortionary taxes elsewhere in the economy, see Goulder (1995) and Parry and Oates (2000). Parry and Bento (2001) use simple general equilibrium model to study how the welfare effect from road toll on work related commuting depends on the form of revenue recycling. In their model, single representative household makes decisions about labor-leisure and transportation mode. Since congestion charge in their model raises the cost of commuting to work, it affects the net wage similar to an income tax and therefore decreases employment at the extensive margin. If the revenues are returned in the form of lump-sum, the authors find that the welfare loss in the labor market even can exceed the Pigouvian welfare gain from internalizing the congestion externality. Comparing this with two other recycling schemes, subsidized public transport and lowered labor taxes, they find the latter the most preferable. For both these revenue recycling schemes, the net welfare effect is found to be positive. This basic model has been extended in many different directions. Van Dender (2003) studies optimal tax structures in the case pricing can or cannot be differentiated between trip purposes. Van Dender reaches results similar to those of Parry and Bento but also stresses the importance of differentiating between labor and leisure trips. Mayeres and Proost (1997) adopt theoretical results from the optimal tax literature to road pricing, allowing them to study optimal tax structures and revenue neutral tax reforms in tax system with congestion type of externalities. Several studies have also tried to incorporate these ideas into traditional cost-benefit analysis framework for transport projects, adapted to allow for external distortions and market imperfections, see Calthrop et al. (2010), Fosgerau and Pilegaard (2008) and Zhu et al. (2009). An overview of the road pricing literature can be found in Fosgerau and Van Dender (2010). 77 general conclusion in many of these models is that the way the revenues are recycled is crucial for the total welfare of the policy (Van Dender, 2003). recurrent policy recommendation in the literature is that the collected revenues should be used to reduce distortive labor taxes rather than being spend on increased public transport subsidies or returned in lump-sum transfer unless equity considerations are explicitly included in the social welfare funtion, see Mayeres and Proost (2001), Parry and Bento (2001) and Verhoef and Ubbels (2002). The labor supply effect can also be interpreted as location effect. decrease in labor supply in model of work-related commuting between suburb and the city centre can be interpreted as the commuters choosing to work at another location than in the city centre. Effects on location and land use from transport policy are for example modeled in Anas and Kim (1996), Eliasson and Mattsson (2001) and Venables (2007), and Sundberg (2009) investigates regional effects of different transport related infrastructure polices. Equity effects and the distributional impact of a congestion charge In partial-equilibrium studies of congestion pricing where only the direct effects in the transport market are included in the analysis, the distributional impact is often found to be regressive. This result does however not generally hold when indirect effects are included in the analysis. If the transport pricing policy is integrated in larger general fiscal policy, congestion pricing may very well have progressive impact on welfare as shown in de Palma and Lindsey (2004). Mayeres and Proost (2002) show that the efficiency, equity and acceptability of congestion charging policy crucially depend on how the revenues are used. Their main conclusion is that equity and acceptability cannot be discussed only at the level of the transport market. Instead, wider analysis is needed that includes the use of the revenues and its effects. One reason for this is that the value of the collected charges is much larger than the net benefits. Using the revenues to reduce public transport fares will clearly have different distributional impact than labor tax cut or lumpsum replacement, as is illustrated in Berg (2007), Eliasson and Mattsson (2006) and Mayeres and Proost (2001). Several empirical studies of congestion charges have also empirically analyzed welfare and equity effects of real congestion charging system. Karlström and Franklin (2009) estimate the welfare effects of the Stockholm Trial for different demographic groups including both the toll’s direct effect and effect in the form behavioral adjustments as result of the toll. Disregarding the effect of revenue recycling, they find small and regressive effect of the toll even though the magnitude of the overall effect is not significant. For review of equity effects of road pricing, see Levinson (2010). The modal-choice approach to road pricing Another modeling approach that has been used to study road pricing is mode choice models, see Armelius (2005), Arnott and Yan (2000), Glazer and 78 Niskanen (2000), Hultkrantz and Liu (2009) and Small and Yan (2001). The modal-choice approach is suited for transport systems with well developed public transport system that can serve as substitute to commuting by car. Armelius and Hultkrantz (2006) use modal-choice model in an ex-ante study of the Stockholm congestion trial to estimate the welfare effects of road tolls. In the model working population with an exogenous wage distribution commutes to work crossing road toll. To get to work individuals can choose between two transport modes, fast and expensive mode (car) and slow and cheap mode (public transport). Compared to the models in the previous section, labor supply is constant so the individuals can only choose their transport mode to maximize their utility. Given fixed income distribution, Armelius (2004) shows that there exists unique break point income level such that people with higher income choose car and those with lower income level choose public transport. In the study Armelius finds that road toll affects the middle class the most negative, while the winners are found both among people with high and low income depending on how the revenues are recycled. 4.3 Analytical model The model used in this paper extends the general equilibrium framework in Parry and Bento (2001) with modal-choice model following Armelius and Hultkrantz (2006). simple traffic model is embedded within general equilibrium model where labor supply is endogenous and strictly complementary to commuting. In the model, population of heterogeneous individuals commutes between home and work in static economy. First, we describe the commuters’ utility maximization problem and choice of labor supply as function of an individual’s daily wage. Second, we turn the model into general equilibrium model by deriving formulas for aggregate labor supply, congestion and the governmental budget constraint. Commuter utility maximization problem Consider population of commuters with an exogenous daily wage distribution ) for .19 Without loss of generality we normalize the size of the ( ) = 1 The utility function for each individual is population to one, i.e. ( ) where the utility function is quasi-concave, strictly given by increasing and twice differentiable, is consumption of composite commodity with price normalized to one, and is leisure measured as the total free time in period with length Every individual chooses the number of work days and mode of transportation to maximize his or her utility subject to constraints in time and budget. The daily work hours are assumed to be fixed and normalized to one. We also assume that the individuals can choose the number of work days without restriction, i.e. the job opportunities are unlimited. The individuals can choose 19 The wage distribution can be interpreted as distribution of productivity. Assume that each individual works at competitive firm with production function where is number of work days chosen by the individual and is the individual’s exogenous productivity. The individual’s daily wage will hence be equal to his or her productivity 79 between two transport modes to get to work, fast mode (car) subject to congestion and slow mode (public transport) with no congestion. Following Parry and Bento (2001) and Van Dender (2003) we further assume that the number of work trips is strictly complementary to labor supply, i.e. the number of work days is directly proportional to the number of commuting trips. commuting trip (back-and-forth) by car requires units of time and costs public transport trip takes units of time and costs We assume that the travel time for car in equilibrium is lower than the travel time for public transport and that the cost for car trip is higher than the cost for public transport trip .20 The government imposes proportional income tax on labor, congestion charge on car commuting (cost for return trip) and provides all individuals with lump-sum transfer which is assumed to be equally distributed in the population. The utility maximization problem for an individual with formulated as follows: . max = [( daily wage ) ( ] ] + [( ) (1 + ) (1 + ) 0, 0, 0, 0 ( ) ) ( ) can be (1) where and are the number of work days the individual commutes by car and public transport. The individual’s total supply of labor is therefore Since the size of the population is large, each individual takes the travel times and the governmental lump-sum transfer as exogenous when choosing travel mode and the number of work days. Given these assumptions we can show that there exists unique modal-split wage that will split the population into two groups. All individuals with daily wage lower than will only travel with public transport and those with wage above will all choose car. To show this, we insert the time and budget definitions into the utility function and use multipliers to capture the inequality constraints on and We can then formulate the Karush-Kuhn-Tucker conditions for the constrained optimization problem: t) u [( u [( t) c ] c ] u (1 + u (1 + ) ) L L L L 20 Since =0 =0 0 0 0 0 =0 =0 (2) and the commuters only value time and cost, car mode will only be used if 80 To solve this problem we need to consider four special cases. Assume first that both multipliers are zero. This corresponds to an interior solution where both we get: transport modes are used. Solving (2) for = ( ) = ( ) (3) From equation (3) we see that an interior solution requires that the ratio between consumption and leisure is equal for both transport modes, i.e. ( ) ( ) ( ) where ( ) = ( ) and ( ) = Since both ratios are linear in the daily wage there exists unique solution to (3) as ( ) has steeper slope than ( ) which is the case because of our long as previous assumptions that For anyone to choose public transport, we also need to assume that > Solving for the modal-split wage we get: = ( )( ( )( ) ( ) ) (4) The second special case is when = 0 and > 0 From (2) we see that this implies that = 0 i.e. only car mode is used, and that: Since > 0 and = ( ) = ( ( > 0 this implies that ) ( ) ) + ( < ( ) (5) ) Solving for we see that this can only be true for That is, for commuters with higher wage than it is optimal to only commute by car. In similar way it can be shown that the third special case, where > 0 and = 0 only is valid for wages lower than the modal-split wage, i.e. Finally, we have fourth special case where both > 0 and > 0 This corresponds to situation where the individual chooses not to work at all, i.e. = 0 and =0 To maximize utility, every individual will choose the transport mode with the highest ratio between consumption and leisure ( ) as function of his or her daily wage Since we have assumed that the travel time by car is shorter than the travel time by public transport, this means that all individuals with higher wage than will only choose car, and all with lower wage than will only choose public transport. The population is hence split into two distinct groups; one only commuting by car and one only commuting by public transport. Labor supply discontinuity Conditional on chosen travel mode the utility maximization problem in (1) ( )( ( ) can be reformulated to the problem max ) Given that the utility function is quasi-concave, strictly increasing and twice differentiable in and there exists unique solution ( ) ( ) to this utility maximization problem for each ( ) ( ) and assuming that the These demand functions are continuous in 81 substitution effect is greater than the income effect, the demand for leisure ( ) is also non-increasing in ( ) In previous section we saw that the choice of travel mode could be expressed as function of the daily wage where ( ) = argmax ( ) ( ) Since ( ) are strictly increasing linear functions in ( ) and and both ( ) at the modal-split wage ( ) this implies that the demand for leisure is non-increasing continuous function for all that is ( ) = ( ) where ( ) = max ( ) ( ) This also means that the demand for leisure at the modal split wage is the same for both transport modes, that ( ) ( ) is From the time constraint, labor supply ( ) (number of work days conditional on mode can be calculated as function of leisure and travel time for the chosen transport mode. ( ) ( )= (6) Since this creates positive discontinuity in the labor supply curve ( ) at the modal-split point depending on whether the individual travels by car or by public transport. ( ) ( ) ( )= ( ) ( ) = ( ( ) )( ( ) ) > 0 (7) The intuition behind the discontinuity in the labor supply curve ) is that an individual with wage equal to the modal-split wage can use the time gain from choosing car instead of public transport to work more, in order to fully compensate for the higher commuting cost. Since both ( ) and ( ) are non-decreasing in and the discontinuity is strictly positive, this implies that sup ) < inf ) and labor supply ( ) (the number of work days using the optimal choice of travel mode for wage is non-decreasing in Labor supply can therefore be expressed as 21 function of the daily wage. ( )= ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) (8) Aggregate labor supply and congestion To turn the model into general equilibrium model we need to formulate expressions for aggregate labor supply and travel time on the congested road. Total labor supply can be calculated by aggregating the individual supply of labor in the population, i.e. 21 Note that the optimal choice of labor supply at the modal-split wage is not unique. As long as the daily wage distribution does not contain point mass at this has no effect on total welfare, aggregate labor supply and the congestion level. 82 = ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) = ( ) ( ) + (9) where is the modal-split point and ( ) is the wage distribution function. Because we have assumed that labor supply is strictly complementary to commuting, total labor supply is also equal to the total number of car and public transport trips, i.e. Since road usage is subject to congestion, we assume that the car travel time i.e. is an increasing function of the total number of car trips ( ) ( ) ( ) (10) (. ) is volume delay function giving the average travel time as where function of the total number of car trips in the period. To keep the model simple, we assume that both travel time and travel cost for public transport is i.e. we neglect the independent of the number of public transport users Mohring effect. Welfare and equity To measure social welfare, we use an aggregate equivalent variation. From the utility maximization problem (1) we can calculate the indirect utility function for an individual with daily wage as function of the exogenous parameters.22 ( ) ( ) (11) Using the indirect utility function we define the equivalent variation of policy as the lump-sum payment that makes an individual indifferent between the situation before and after the policy has been implemented. We define the ( ) for an individual with wage as: equivalent variation ( ) ( ) (12) The total welfare change of policy can then be calculated as the lump-sum payment needed to make everyone in the population indifferent between the before and after situation, that is: = ( ) ( ) (13) As an alternative welfare measure we will also study the population’s total gross wage which can be calculated as: = ( ) ( ) (14) Since we assume that each individual’s daily wage is equal to his or her productivity, the total gross wage is equal to the total private production. To evaluate the distributional impact of the analyzed policies, we will use two inequality measures; the Gini measure which is scale invariant and the Kolm measure which is translation invariant. Scale invariance (or relative inequality aversion) and translation invariance (or absolute inequality aversion) is 22 Observe that although the travel time and the lump-sum transfer are treated as exogenous by the individuals, they are actually endogenous in the general equilibrium model. 83 associated with different views of inequality. Definitions of the measures can be found in Ramjerdi (2006). Because welfare is calculated as an equivalent variation from the initial situation, we can only analyze the inequality of the change in welfare and not the inequality of the absolute welfare levels before and after the policy. Governmental spending and budget restriction Public spending can be modeled in several ways. Ballard and Don Fullerton (1992) distinguish between two common approaches; the Pigou-HarbergerBrowning approach and the Stiglitz-Dasgupta-Atkinson-Stern approach. In the first approach, focus lies on comparing distortionary tax instruments with equal revenue yield. Public spending in this setting is often modeled as redistributive lump-sum transfer back to the taxpayers. This makes the approach better suited for analyzing the composition of the tax system, rather than being used to evaluate the overall level of taxation. In the second approach, the focus is instead on finding conditions for the optimal provision of public goods, given that the production must be financed through distortionary taxes. Parry and Bento (2000, 2001) and Van Dender (2003) all study situations where the government returns the tax revenues through lump-sum transfers. When analyzing revenue neutral tax reforms, this can be feasible method. The assumption is however problematic when we want to evaluate the welfare effects of policies that are not revenue neutral, such as when the toll revenues are recycled through an increased lump-sum transfer. The reason is that if we want to evaluate the welfare effect associated with change in the governmental expenditures, and thus the overall level of taxation, we also need to model the benefits associated with public spending, in addition to the costs of distortionary taxation. Unless distributional considerations are explicitly included in the welfare function, as in Mayeres and Proost (2001), it is difficult to motivate why rational government would impose distortionary income taxes only to return the revenues back to the tax payers in lump-sum transfer. This is also the problem with the standard textbook assumption in Parry and Bento (2001). When comparing different revenue recycling schemes, they find that it is preferable to recycle the collected toll revenues from congestion charge through reduced labor tax rather than through an increased lump-sum transfer or an increased public transport subsidy. This has however more to do with the fact that the marginal benefit of public spending (effectuated through lump-sum transfer or public transport subsidy) in their chosen base case scenario is lower than the marginal cost of public funds (from the distortionary income tax) as long as the income tax is set above zero. That means that the government even without congestion charge can improve welfare by lowering the distortionary income tax at the expense of reduced lump-sum transfer; then it is also clear that any additional revenues from congestion charge should be spent on decreasing distortionary taxes, rather than on increasing public spending. This issue is further discussed in paper in this thesis. Instead, the idea in this paper is to study deviations from point where all tax instruments, except the congestion charge, are optimally chosen. This allows us 84 to separate the welfare effect of the congestion charge from the welfare effect of general adjustment of the governmental policy instruments. This welfare effect can then be combined with the welfare effect from general adjustment of the policy instruments in the cases where we believe that the policy instruments ( and in the initial situation are not optimally chosen. Since we want to study situation that resembles reality, we need to create model where the optimal income tax is set above zero. To do this, we assume that the government uses production function to produce the lump-sum 23 transfer. The governmental budget restriction is therefore given by: ( ) (15) (16) + where is the governmental lump-sum transfer to each individual, (. ) is strictly increasing governmental production function, is the population’s total gross wage, and is the collected tax revenues from the labor tax and the congestion charge. The reason for including governmental production function, and not just assuming that the government only redistributes the collected taxes, is that we want to allow for adjustments of the marginal benefit of public funds in the no toll situation without including explicit equity considerations into our welfare function to motivate the redistribution. By choosing an income tax and corresponding lump-sum transfer that maximizes social welfare, we can isolate the welfare effects of congestion charge from the welfare effect of general adjustment of the other policy instruments. 4.4 Numerical example From the analytical expression (4) we see that since congestion charge increases the cost of commuting by car, it will shift the modal-split wage upwards, increasing the share of public transport commuters in the population. This will in turn reduce congestion and the travel time among the remaining car commuters. The congestion charge therefore has two counteracting effects on labor supply for the remaining car commuters, direct negative effect from the increase commuting cost, and an indirect positive effect from the reduced travel time. To calculate the total labor market response from congestion charge we both need to consider the effect from the modal-shift and the change in labor supply for the remaining car commuters. To illustrate the full effect on labor supply from congestion charge we will study numerical example. The model in the numerical example is calibrated using stylized data from the Stockholm congestion charging trial. In the numerical example we will analyze and compare five different policy scenarios against base case scenario with no congestion charge. The base case scenario (B) is chosen so that the government maximizes social welfare given that the congestion charge is set to zero, i.e. 23 An interpretation of the governmental production function is that the government uses the collected revenues to buy composite commodity from the competitive firms from which it produces governmental commodity which is perfect substitute to private consumption. 85 = 0 Assuming that the government has strict budget constraint, we can frame the problem as choosing an optimal income tax and lump-sum transfer to maximize social welfare given that the congestion charge is equal to zero, i.e. { } In the first two policy scenarios, (G) and (T), the collected toll revenues from the congestion charge are recycled back to the population through an increased lump-sum transfer and through an income tax cut. These two scenarios correspond to the first two revenue recycling polices in Parry and Bento (2001). In the lump-sum scenario, the collected toll revenues are recycled through an increased lump-sum transfer while keeping the income tax constant, i.e. { ), } The new transfer ) is calculated by keeping the income tax constant at the reference level and adjusting the lump-sum transfer so that the governmental budget constraint holds for the chosen congestion charge in the new equilibrium. In the labor tax cut scenario, the new tax rate ) in similar way depends on how much the labor tax can be changed without exceeding the governmental budget constraint, given fixed level of public } spending and the chosen congestion charge i.e. { ), In the third policy scenario (GT), both the income tax and the lump-sum transfer are readjusted to maximize social welfare given the new congestion charge and the governmental budget constraint, i.e. { ( ) ( ) } By studying how the optimal choice of policy instruments changes when we introduce congestion charge, we get measure of the interaction between the congestion charge and the remaining policy instruments for non-marginal changes in The first three policy scenarios are evaluated using daily congestion charge of (corresponding to charge of 2.5€ in the morning peak and 2.5€ in the afternoon peak). In the fourth scenario (O), the model is evaluated using the welfare maximizing congestion charge and the corresponding welfare maximizing choice of policy instruments, i.e. { ( ) ( ) } Finally we include fifth policy scenario (N) where the collected revenues are not recycled back to } Since the toll revenues are used elsewhere in the the commuters, i.e. { economy and we no longer have an equilibrium, welfare is not measured for this scenario. Calibration and choice of base case scenario To calibrate the model numerically we need to specify the daily income distribution, set parameter values to the income tax, travel costs, travel times and specify functional forms for the volume delay function and the utility function. To keep the simulation simple, we assume that the daily wage distribution follows uniform distribution between and 500 €, and that all individuals have Cobb-Douglas type of utility functions: ( ) ) (17) where the parameter is assumed to be equal for all individuals. For volume delay function we use the Bureau of Public Roads function from 1964 which is widely used volume delay function, see Spiess (1990). The function is given by: 86 where ( ) 1 + 0.15 is the free-flow travel time and (18) is road capacity constant. To compare the impact of the chosen policies, we need to specify the base case scenario from which we make the comparisons. The choice of base case scenario is important since it have large effect on the relative performance of the different revenue recycling policies. To separate the welfare effect of the congestion charge from the welfare effect of general adjustment of the remaining governmental policy instruments, we need to choose base case scenario where the marginal costs are equal to the marginal benefits of the different policy instruments in the initial situation (except for the congestion charge). This implies that the government chooses income tax and lump-sum transfer to maximize social welfare in the model, given that the congestion charge is set to zero. Assuming that the government has strict budget constraint, we can frame the problem as choosing an optimal income tax to maximize social welfare where the lump-sum is given by the governmental budget constraints (15) and (16) and is zero. Since social welfare in the model is measured as an equivalent variation, the measure depends on what initial situation we measure the equivalence from. To find the set of policy instruments that maximizes social welfare we therefore search for base case scenario with local maximum in the measured equivalent variation. The base case scenario is chosen so that the modal-split wage splits the population into two equal parts. To set the optimal income tax above zero we also need to adjust the governmental production function to increase the marginal benefit of the lump-sum transfer. To simplify the analyze we assume that the governmental production function has constant return to scale, i.e. )= The calibrated parameters are summarized in Table 5. Table 5: Summary of model parameters for the numerical example Parameter Value Daily income distribution, minimum wage € Daily income distribution, maximum wage 500 € Car cost 10 €/return trip Public transport cost 3.3 €/return trip Utility parameter 0.36 Public transport travel time 0.1875 units of time (90 min/return trip) Car free-flow travel time 0.0833 units of time (40 min/return trip) Car road capacity constant 0.2667 return trips/day units of time (1 day) Time endowment Governmental production function parameter 1.3 Income tax in base case scenario 25.4% Lump-sum transfer in base case scenario 60.45 € 87 Simulation results Labor supply discontinuity Figure shows labor supply ( ) as function of the daily wage for the base case scenario and for congestion charge of (price for return-trip) where the revenues are recycled back to the population through labor tax cut (the second policy scenario). Because travel mode in the model is chosen as function of the daily wage, the population is split into two distinct groups; one group only commuting by public transport and one group only commuting by car. Since individuals with high wage choose to work more if they commute by car than by public transport, this creates discontinuity in the labor supply curve at the modal-split wage The congestion charge increases the cost of commuting by car which will shift the modal-split point to higher daily wage level, hence increasing the share of public transport commuters. The congestion charge also has direct negative effect on labor supply for the car commuters since it decreases the net wage in similar way as an increased income tax. The negative labor supply effect is however outbalanced by the shorter travel time, which both shifts the modalsplit wage downwards and stimulates labor supply among the remaining car commuters. However, even though the total number of car trips decreases because of the congestion charge, aggregate labor supply increases. Labor supply (full time equivalent work days) 0,9 0,8 0,7 0,6 0,5 0,4 Base case scenario (B) 0,3 Income tax cut scenario (T) 0,2 0,1 0,0 0 100 200 300 400 500 Daily wage (€) Figure 9: Labor supply as function of the daily wage for the base case scenario (B) and for the income tax cut scenario (T) with congestion charge of for return-trip. The welfare effect of congestion charge Figure 10 depicts total welfare as function of the congestion charge for the three different recycling policies. The congestion charge initially increases welfare with similar amount regardless of how the collected revenues are recycled back to the economy. This stands in contrast to the results in Parry and Bento (2001) where the lump-sum recycling scheme was found to have negative effect on total welfare due to increased losses in the labor market. The reason behind the difference is that we in this model, compared to the model by Parry and Bento, have chosen an initial starting point where the marginal 88 benefit of public funds (e.g. the governmental lump-sum transfer) is equal to the marginal cost of public funds (e.g. the income tax). Setting the congestion charge too high will on the other hand reduce total welfare for all recycling polices. In the model, welfare is maximized with daily congestion charge of 13.46 (i.e. the total congestion charge for return trip) given that all policy instruments are adjusted in an optimal way. We also see that the lump-sum transfer recycling policy lags behind for congestion charges above 10 €. With lower level of congestion (higher congestion charge), the marginal benefit of policies that increase labor supply (at the expense of an increased number of car trips) increases, compared to policies that primarily reduce congestion. Since the lump-sum transfer has negative impact on labor supply, while the income tax instead stimulates people to work more, this is part of the explanation for why the performance of the two policies differ for higher toll levels. 5 4 Welfare (€) 3 2 Lump-sum transfer recycling policy 1 Income tax cut recycling policy 0 -1 Optimal adjustment recycling policy -2 -3 0 5 10 15 Congestion charge (€) 20 25 Figure 10: Welfare measured as an equivalent variation from the base case scenario as function of the congestion charge when the revenues are recycled through an income tax cut, lump-sum transfer and with an optimal adjustment of both the income tax and the lump-sum transfer. Table gives numerical values for welfare, equity, aggregate labor supply, modal-split point and car travel time for all five policy scenarios. The congestion charge in scenario one, two, three and five are and the congestion charge in the fourth scenario are set at the welfare maximizing level 13.46 €. Although car travel time, and hence congestion, is reduced, regardless of how the toll revenues are used, the increased lump-sum recycling scheme is clearly the most effective policy for reducing congestion because of its negative effect on labor supply. The income tax cut has the opposite effect since the increased net wage both stimulates labor supply directly and increases the share of car commuters in the population. Compared to the base case scenario (B); aggregate labor supply increases for both the income tax cut scenario (T) and the welfare maximizing scenario (O), 89 but decreases when the revenues are recycled back through an increased lumpsum transfer (G). However, when the revenues are not recycled back to the commuters (N), the effect on aggregate labor supply is also positive. This indicates that the congestion charge per se does not have negative effect on labor supply. Instead the negative labor supply effect comes from the increased lump-sum transfer and the underlying model assumption that an increased lump-sum transfer has negative effect on labor supply. Table 6: Scenario summary for the base case scenario and the four policy scenarios Base case Lump-sum scenario transfer (B) scenario (G) Income tax cut scenario (T) Optimal adjustment scenario (GT) Welfare maximizing scenario (O) No recycling scenario (N) - 2.688 € 2.670 € 2.690 € 4.415 € - wage 183.2 € 183.7 € 186.3 € 184.3 € 189.5 € 185.6 € - 0.1124 0.4621 0.1744 0.5618 - Kolm ( = 0.1) Aggregate labor 0.589 days supply 0.0186 0.585 days 0.2301 0.598 days 0.0406 0.588 days 0.8871 0.610 days 0.594 days Modal-split point 250.7 € 284.2 € 284.4 € 284.3 € 342.3 € 285.4 € Car travel time 69.2 min 58.1 min 58.7 min 58.2 min 46.37 min 58.2 min Lump-sum 60.45 € 62.89 € 60.45 € 62.37 € 59.11 € 60.45 € Income tax 25.38% 25.38% 24.01% 25.08% 22.08% 25.38% Welfare Total gross Gini coefficient Congestion charge € € € € 13.46 € The distributional impact of congestion charge Using the model we can also analyze the distributional impact of congestion charge. Figure 11 shows welfare as function of the daily wage in the population. To clarify the discussion, the population is divided into four different groups (I,II,III,IV); group consists of people with the lowest wage that do not commute; group II contains public transport commuters; group III consists of car commuters in the base case scenario that switch to public transport because of the policy; and group IV consists of the car commuters that remain to drive car to work after the policy. Observe that the dividing lines between the groups depend on the parameters and do therefore differ between the scenarios. As can be seen from the figure, the distributional impact of the congestion charge strongly depends on the chosen form of revenue recycling. In the example, people on low income (group and II) benefit more from increased public spending compared to labor tax cut, while people on high income (group II and IV) have opposite preferences. We also see that although the commuters with the highest income pay most of the charges; they also gain most from the congestion charge, regardless of how the revenues are recycled. When the collected revenues are recycled through increased lump-sum 90 € transfers, the relative losers are found among those switching from car to public transport (group III) and in the group of remaining car drivers with the lowest daily wage (leftmost part of group IV). From the inequality measures in Table we see that the welfare gains from the congestion charge is more unequal when the revenues are recycled through an income tax cut (T) than through lump-sum transfer (G). This is because both the tax cut and the time gains benefit those with the highest wages most. For small toll levels, the optimal readjustment policy also spreads welfare more equally than the income tax cut. For larger toll levels, inequality increases. Figure 11 also reveals that the welfare maximizing scenario (O) is not even Pareto improving. The reason for this is that the congestion charge narrows the tax base which increases the marginal cost of public funds; to improve welfare the government therefore decreases public spending (i.e. the transfer to compensate for the increased distortions in the tax system. See Bovenberg (1999) for an in depth discussion on the topic. The analysis hence highlights the importance of also including equity aspects when analyzing the welfare effects of transport policy, especially if one is interested in the distributional impact and political acceptance of the analyzed policy. 10 Welfare (€) 8 I II III IV 6 Lump-sum transfer scenario (G) 4 Income tax cut scenario (T) 2 Optimal adjustment scenario (GT) 0 Welfare maximizing policy scenario(O) -2 0 100 200 300 Daily wage (€) 400 500 Figure 11: Welfare as function of daily wage measured as an equivalent variation from the base case scenario and the four analyzed policy scenarios. In Figure 12 the difference in labor supply compared to the base case scenario as function of the daily wage is shown. While all schemes increase labor supply for individuals on high income (group IV), the effect varies more among low-income earners (group II) depending on the recycling policy. Labor supply is also negative, regardless of how the revenues are recycled, for the part of the population that changes from car to public transport as result of the congestion charge (group III). From the figure we also see that the indirect effect on labor supply from the chosen form of revenue recycling is larger than the direct effect on labor supply from the congestion charges. This also explains why the change in total labor supply, as summarized in Table 6, is positive for 91 both the labor tax cut (T) and the no recycling scenario (N), but negative for the increased lump-sum transfer scenario (G). Difference in labor supply (full time equivalent work days) 0,06 Lump-sum transfer scenario (G) 0,04 I II III IV 0,02 Labor tax cut scenario (T) 0,00 Optimal adjustment scenario (GT) -0,02 Welfare maximizing scenario (O) No recycling scenario (N) -0,04 0 100 200 300 Daily wage (€) 400 500 Figure 12: Differences in labor supply as function of daily wage for the five policy scenarios compared to the base case scenario. Sensitivity analysis To analyze the sensitivity of the numerical results, we vary key parameters, recalibrate the policy instruments in the base case scenario to maximize welfare without congestion charge, and then study the welfare effect of the three different revenue recycling policies for small increase in the toll level. In the numerical example, small congestion charge was found to produce positive welfare for all three revenue recycling policies. This result is robust to changes in the model parameters as long as the initial level of congestion in the no-toll situation is not too low. Reducing the road capacity increases the welfare of the congestion charge since the congestion is more severe in the before toll situation. For marginal changes in the congestion charge, the welfare gain from congestion charge does not depend on how the collected revenues are recycled. As long as the income tax and lump-sum transfer are set at their optimal levels in the no toll situation, this result is also robust to changes in the model parameters. For non-marginal changes we saw that the labor tax cut performed better than the increased lump-sum transfer. By changing the parameter values of the model we can make the lump-sum transfer policy increase welfare more than the labor tax cut. This means that the relative performance24 of the different revenue recycling policies for non-marginal toll levels is not robust to changes in the underlying assumptions about key parameter values. In the example we assume that the governmental policy instruments ( ,0 in the base case scenario are chosen to maximize social welfare. This means that 24 etc. 92 the marginal cost of the income tax is equal to the marginal benefit of the lumpsum transfer in the initial situation. Relaxing this restriction results in situation where the indirect welfare effect from spending the collected revenues even for marginal toll levels depends on the used recycling policy. If the income tax for instance is set above its optimal level in the no toll situation, the government can increase welfare by reducing the tax at the expense of decreased public spending. recycling policy that reduces the income tax towards its optimal (lower) level will therefore improve total welfare more than recycling policy that increases public spending. The relative performance of the analyzed revenue recycling polices is therefore sensitive to changes in the initial calibration of the remaining policy instruments in the no toll situation. 4.5 Concluding remarks In the paper, all analyzed revenue recycling policies has positive effect on the total welfare, regardless if the revenues are returned in lump-sum transfer or used to cut distortionary income taxes. The welfare gain from the lump-sum recycling policy is also found to be more or less equal to the labor tax cut policy for small toll levels. This stands in contrast to earlier studies where the efficiency loss in the labor market is found to exceed the welfare gains from internalizing the congestion externalities in the transport market. Two main reasons behind this result are; first that we study population with heterogeneous value of time, and second that our analysis starts from initial no-toll situation where the policy instruments (except the congestion charge) are optimally chosen to maximize social welfare. The analysis hence stresses the importance of recognizing that people have different value of time and that this can have substantial effect on aggregate labor supply and hence welfare. The reason for this is that the congestion charge primary price out people (and trips) with low willingness to pay so that people with higher willingness to pay can drive and work more. Disregarding equity considerations, the congestion charge leads to more efficient use of the available road space. From the numerical analysis we also saw that the congestion charge only had direct negative effect on labor supply for the car commuters that changed from car to public transport because of the congestion charge. For the car commuters that continued to commute by car after the congestion charge, the effect on labor supply was positive. For the public transport commuters, the effect on labor supply depended on the revenue recycling policy. The effect on total labor supply from the congestion charge was hence ambiguous and mainly depended on how the revenues were used. The chosen revenue recycling policy also had large effect on the distributional impact of the congestion charges. If the collected revenues were recycled through an income tax cut, car commuters in the highest wage group that remained to drive car got most of the welfare gain compared to the no-toll situation, while if the revenues were used to increase public spending through an increased lump-sum transfer, the welfare gains were more proportionally spread across the population. 93 critique of the model is that the modal choice approach used in this paper tends to overestimate the correlation between an individual’s daily gross wage and his or her mode choice. Without this strong correlation, some of the results will be smaller. Nevertheless, user heterogeneity and self selection cannot be completely ignored when studying congestion pricing, and, as has been shown in this paper, can have substantial effect on labor supply, welfare and the distributional impact of congestion charge. 4.6 Acknowledgements The author wishes to thank Lars-Göran Mattsson, Jonas Eliasson, Marcus Sundberg and Stef Proost for helpful, yet challenging, comments on the manuscript. The research was financially supported by the Swedish Transport Administration (Trafikverket), the former Swedish Road Administration (Vägverket) and the Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation Systems (VINNOVA). 94 4.7 References Anas, A., and Kim, I. (1996): 'General equilibrium models of polycentric urban land use with endogenous congestion and job agglomeration', Journal of Urban Economics, 40, 232-256(25). Armelius, H. 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A cost–benefit analysis Michael Lundholm, Stockholm University Matts Andersson, WSP Tommy Lundgren, SLU Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Markus Sandberg, KTH Royal Institute of Technology Introduction Without investment costs, financial policy tools are almost by definition socioeconomically profitable if they push prices closer to the marginal cost. But since most financial policy measures include an investment cost the question is, as with physical investments, if the benefits are bigger than the costs. large part of the benefit of financial policy measures might be that the income can be used to lower other taxes, which might have positive effects on the economy. This positive effect is called “marginal cost of public funds” in the economic literature. Many articles have argued though that the effect on the tax base cancels the incomes from the policy measurement, meaning that the “double dividend” of environmental taxes does not exist. The aim of this article is to do cost benefit analysis of the fuel and kilometre taxes. In doing this we estimate the taxe base effect and compare it with the mcpf effect. Most of the literature in this area is based on analytical models, for example assuming an optimal tax system. We start out with an analytical model, but we estimate the parameters/elasticities empirically on Swedish data. The estimations of the tax base, the marginal cost of public funds etc are done with both factor demand-model (FDM) and spatial general equilibrium (SCGE) model (STRAGO). Since FEM and SCGE are two quite different approaches, an aim of this study is also to compare these approaches. The outline of the article is as follows. First we describe our two cases to be tested and analyse their effects on transport costs. To calculate the 97 effect on transport costs, we use a model developed in an earlier project. After that our analytical general equilibrium model, including the parameters to be estimated, is presented. Our estimation/simulation tools FDM and STRAGO are then described. Since this article contains one cost model and two models for estimation/simulation, the model presentations are made very short (readers looking for an in depth knowledge of the models are directed to presentations in earlier articles and reports). Finally we test our two cases based on parameters from FDM and STRAGO. 2 Our two cases to be tested The introduction of taxes in the transport sector is typically motivated by a mix of allocation and fiscal reasons in line with Pigouvian taxation and Ramsey taxation.1 In the particular case of a kilometre tax, the Pigouvian rationale is fundamental since it internalizes externalities that are not sufficiently accounted for in present prices, including other taxes. The relevant externalities to internalize are primarily emissions to the air except Carbon Dioxide (CO2 ) emissions and road deformation. For heavy goods vehicles, emissions and road deformation are both highly correlated with transport distance. CO2 is the main externality that is corrected with the diesel tax. Diesel consumption correlates perfectly with CO2 emissions, given the carbon content of the fuel. Although the aim of the article is not to give judgements on specific suggestions we have tried to choose the most politically relevant suggestions for kilometre tax and diesel tax in Sweden. Most people advocating for kilometre tax in Sweden support the suggestion by the Swedish institution for communication analysis to set the tax to 1 SEK per vehicle kilometre.2 This is based on the external effects calculated to 1.4 SEK per km, out of which 0.4 SEK is internalized by the energy tax. The most relevant suggestion for raised diesel tax is the opposition’s suggestion to raise the CO2 tax on fuel with 0.17 SEK per kilo CO2 , which implies that the diesel tax increases with 2.64 × 0.17 ≈ 0.45 SEK per litre diesel. A model is used to calculate the effects of the kilometre tax and the increased fuel tax on the total transportation costs per truck kilometre.3 The kilometre tax results in a cost increase of 6.6 percent, and the increased fuel tax in an increase of 1.5 percent. The effect on total transportation cost for each commodity group depends on the share of road transport, which differs from 10 to 95 percent for the 12 commodity groups in the 1 Pigou (1920); Ramsey (1927), Diamond and Mirrlees (1971a,b) and Mirrlees (1971). SIKA (2007). 3 The model was originally developed in 2006 for Swedish EPA (Naturvårdsverket, 2007) and is described thoroughly in that report. The basis is data from the Swedish transport administration, the Swedish tax administration, the Swedish petroleum institute and Svenska åkeriförbundet. During this project the indata has been updated. 2 2 Swedish goods transport model.4 Assuming that the cost increase does not affect mode choice the change in total cost could be calculated as cost per kilometre times the share done by truck. This results in the cost change caused by the kilometre tax varying from 0.7 to 6.3 percent respective 0.1 to 1.4 percent for the increase in fuel tax. The truck market share and the result for each product are shown in Table 1 on page 3. Table 1: Truck market share and effects on products. Market Effect Effect Product share km-tax diesel truck (%) (%) tax (%) 1 Agricultural products 0.81 +5.4 +1.2 2 Unprocessed lumber 0.68 +4.5 +1.0 3 Processed wood products 0.88 +5.8 +1.3 4 Foodstuffs 0.95 +6.3 +1.4 5 Crude petroleum 0.36 +2.4 +0.5 6 Petroleum products 0.30 +2.0 +0.4 7 Iron ore and metal waste 0.10 +0.7 +0.1 8 Metal products 0.17 +1.1 +0.3 9 Paper and pulp 0.25 +1.6 +0.4 10 Earth, stone and build 0.69 +4.6 +1.0 11 Chemicals 0.62 +4.1 +0.9 12 Manufactured ind. prod. 0.73 +4.8 +1.1 Sum 0.55 3 External effects SIKA (2007) has valued of the external effects to 2.4 SEK per vehicle kilometre. As mentioned above we use SIKA’s recommendation for kilometre tax (1 SEK per vehicle kilometre). To be consistent we therefore use SIKA’s valuation of the external effects as well. The relation between the valuation of external effects and the tax is as follows. CO2 stands for 1 SEK (of the 2.4 SEK). Since CO2 emissions are better internalized with fuel tax, this is not included in the recommendation for kilometre tax. Of the remaining 1.4 SEK, 0.4 SEK is assumed to be internalized by the energy tax, leaving 1 SEK for the kilometre tax. Valuing CO2 emissions to 1 SEK per vehicle kilometre is based on a CO2 valuation of 1 SEK per kilo and an assumption that the fuel consumption is 4 The statistics has been retrieved from SIKA’s publications, where the commodity groups have been converted from NST/R to the 12 commodity groups that is used in the STAN-model (a freight forecast model). 3 0.4 litre per kilometre. The official Swedish valuation of CO2 is 1.5 SEK per kilo (SIKA, 2009). In the kilometre tax report SIKA has chosen a valuation matching the CO2 part of the fuel tax. Both 1.5 and 1 are high valuations in an international perspective, we have chosen to use SIKA’s valuation anyway to be consistent and since valuation of CO2 is not the focus of this paper. Out of the 2.4 SEK 0.11 SEK is costs for deformation and wear. Including these effects, the total value of the decrease in externalities therefore is 2.29 SEK per vehicle kilometre. However, it turns out that this effect is marginal and we therefore do not take into account the reduction in the cost for deformation and wear in the theoretical analysis as well as in the CBA calculations. 4 Model The purpose of this section is to set up a simple framework in which we will be able to analyse a change a the tax system as a cost–benefit decision. Focus is to identify the different types of effects that will occur. The consider a government which use distortionary taxation and lump sum redistribution is available. The model is a general equilibrium model, but as a simplification we disregard from redistribution and have a representative agent. There is constant returns to scale (no pure profits) and the number of firms normalized to one). Private goods are either consumption commodities consumed by the representative agent or intermediate commodities used by the representative firm to produce consumption commodities. There is no public production. One intermediate commodity is assumed to be “dirty” and affect a negative environmental externality, which in turn affects consumption but not production directly. These assumptions then implies that all goods are taxable, that a pure profits tax is unnecessary since profits are zero due to constant returns to scale and that differential taxation on inputs in the private sector is not used. The legal incidence on consumption commodities are on the representative household and on intermediaries on the representative firm. The general character is similar to Diamond and Mirrlees (1971a). Assume a representative individual economy with standard consumer preferences over private consumption goods x, and the environmental externality Ê described by the utility function u. Facing the consumer price vector q = p + t the consumer’s utility maximisation problem is max x u(x, y, Ê) s.t. n X (pi + ti ) xi ≤ y, (1) i=0 where y is a public lump sum transfer. The solution is the vector Marshallian demand functions x∗ (p + t, y, Ê) ∈ Rn+1 . Let the indirect utility function 4 be υ(p + t, y, Ê) := u(x∗ (p + t, y, Ê), Ê). Roy’s identity is ∂υ ∂qk = −λx∗k (p + t, y, Ê) ∀k = 0, . . . , c, where λ is the marginal utility of income in the optimal point. Private consumption goods are produced competitively according to a constant returns to scale production technology F (v, w) = 0, where v is the n + m + 1 dimensional output vector of private consumption and intermediary goods and w the m dimensional input vector of private intermediary goods. Let C be the set of private consumption goods and I the set of private intermediary goods. Intermediate goods face the specific taxes τ with legal incidence on producers. In a long run competitive equilibrium the optimum output vector v∗ (p, τ ) and input vector w∗ (p, τ ) are determined. The externality is assumed to depend on one dirty intermediate commodity, denoted wD , such that E (wD ). The equilibrium conditions then are x∗i (p + t, y, Ê) = vi∗ (p − τ ) wi∗ (p − τ) = vi∗ (p Ê = E ∀i ∈ C, − τ) ∗ (wD (p ∀i ∈ I, and − τ )) . (2a) (2b) (2c) Consider now a government that considers to increase the level taxation of an intermediate good (dτ taxes unchanged, Pk > 0),∗ leaving P all other ∗ subject to a balanced budget, i∈C ti xi + i∈I τi wi = y, and the equilibrium conditions (2). To balance the budget the transfer to households is changed (dy 6= 0). Therefore, there will be only two the control variables; i.e., p (τk , y). Note that in the following Ê denotes the equilibrium quantity of the environmental externality. The welfare effect we want to evaluate is dυ = dυ dυ dτk + dy. dτk dy (3) Rearranging and using Roy’s identity we get X ∂pi 1 dυ 1 ∂υ dE =− x∗i + + λ dτk ∂τk λ ∂ Ê dτk i∈C 1− X i∈C ∂pi x∗i 1 ∂υ dE + ∂y λ ∂ Ê dy Differentiating the budget set and rearranging we get P P dx∗ dw∗ wk∗ + i∈C ti dτki + i∈I τi dτki µy dy = = , ∗ ∗ P P dx dw i i dτk µ τk 1− ti − τi i∈C i∈I dy ! dy . (4) dτk (5) dy where the last equality follows from the standard definition of social marginal welfare of tax revenue.5 P P dx∗ dw∗ That is, µy = λ/ 1 − i∈C ti dyi − i∈I τi dyi is the social marginal welfare of tax revenue from lump sum taxation etc. 5 5 Combining, rearranging and using that MCPFx = µx /λ we get ! X ∂pi dυ ∂υ dE 1 MCPFτk = − x∗i + MCPFτk dτk ∂τk λ ∂ Ê dτk i∈C ! X ∂pi 1 ∂υ dE ∗ MCPFy . + + 1− xi ∂y λ ∂ Ê dy (6) i∈C 5 FDM The econometric modelling approach is the same as in Hammar et al. (2008, 2011), which both use a partial equilibrium factor demand model to study the impact of a kilometre tax on Swedish industry.6 The model is based on standard micro-economic foundations. We assume (1) that the objective of each individual firm is to maximize profits, (2) that each individual firm operates in a competitive environment, and (3) that each individual firm has access to a technology that transforms a number of inputs into a single output. Assumption (1) implies, inter alia, that the firm chooses production level and input demands simultaneously. Furthermore, assumption (2) implies that all input and output prices are exogenous to the firm. Assumption (3) implies that we can describe the technology with a production function. The profit function derived from these assumptions has the usual properties, implying it is increasing in output price, and non-increasing in input prices. Applying Hotelling’s lemma to the specified profit function, we obtain supply and demand as functions of all prices. In order to obtain an operational form of the demand system we need to specify an empirical functional form for the profit function. Like Hammar et al. (2008, 2011) we have chosen to use the normalized quadratic profit function. From theory it follows that the own price supply effect is positive, whereas the effect on supply from an increase in any input price is negative. The own price demand effect is negative, whereas the cross price effects cannot be determined a priori. The sign of the cross price effect will depend on the technology, and on whether inputs are substitutes or complements in production. 5.1 Data The data set is a firm level unbalanced panel covering the 1990–2001 period. It contains plants with more than five employees and is classified according to the industry standard and includes plant level data on output (sales), input data on (quantities and values) labour, electricity and fuels used, gross investment, and transport costs. In the official data on transport costs 6 For more detailed background on factor demand modelling and the specific approach used, see the references in Hammar et al. (2008, 2011). 6 there is no disaggregating between modes of transport. We handle this shortcoming by dividing the total transport costs according to information on the average share of road transports that are used in respective industry. We have consequently scaled the transport data to reflect the direct road transport cost shares in the different sectors of manufacturing. The proxy for road transport demand is constructed by dividing the scaled transport costs by a price index for heavy vehicle transports (more on this index below). Fuels are aggregated into a single variable (70–80 per cent fossil fuels in aggregate the variable). Capital stock is calculated from data on investment, value added, and salary paid to employees. Assuming that value added is compensation to labour and capital (salaries plus capital costs), we extract the capital stock residually. Output price indices are sector specific, meaning that we have one output price index for each industry. Firm specific input prices can be calculated from the costs for labour, electricity, and fuels. Price of transports and capital are not firm specific. The calculations of these indices are based on national and industry based indices, respectively (taken from Statistics Sweden, producer price index section at www.scb.se), which seems plausible considering that firms have limited opportunities to affect the prices for capital (global market) and transports significantly. For the transport price we use a weighted index containing price indices for labour cost (for employees in the heavy vehicle transport sector), cost of capital, and diesel (used as fuel in heavy transportation vehicles), and a consumer price index reflecting the price development of other costs. The weights used here are 42 per cent for labour, 15 per cent for capital, 26 per cent for fuel, and 17 per cent for other costs.7 5.2 Partial vs. general equilibrium In a partial equilibrium setting, like the factor demand model presented above, policy changes, such as a kilometre tax, do not explicitly generate general equilibrium effects. That is, policy changes have effects only on the prices of those inputs directly affected by the specific policy. For example, an introduction of a kilometre tax translates directly and fully into an upward price change in heavy road transports. No other prices are assumed to change. This may be realistic in some cases, and less realistic in others. For example, significant increases in the road transport price will most likely affect the labour market. Increased transportation costs may affect labour demand, which in turn may affect the labour market and wage rates. In the end, this will affect the overall cost. The model we use here cannot track these types of general equilibrium effects, but the reader should be aware 7 The weights were supplied by TRANSEK (now WSP?), a consulting firm focusing on the transport sector, and are based on the cost of operating a heavy vehicle in road transportation. 7 that they do exist to some degree. To account for all interactive effects between all sectors and markets, a computable general equilibrium model (CGE) would be more suitable. However, this type of model is not without flaws either and the modelling approach used in this analysis certainly has some benefits compared to a CGE. For example, the parameters used in the simulation have been estimated using very detailed micro-panel data, and the massive amount of information it contains is important to consider when choosing between different modelling approaches. It should, however, be stressed that even though we have the data, we cannot study each company separately. The effects from, for example, price changes are to be interpreted as effects for a group of firms, or as a mean effect for a specific group of firms. 6 STRAGO STRAGO (Swedish Trade of Goods, SCGE model calibrated to Sweden) is a spatial computable general equilibrium model of the Swedish economy. In the model, the economic activity that takes place in Sweden is divided between nine different regions, and fourteen different sectors/industries. The economic activities in the different regions induce both interregional and interindustry trade, which requires transports. Similar to the partial equilibrium factor demand model, the equilibrium model described here is based on standard micro-economic foundations. The model includes descriptions of the actions of both firms and households, as well as the interactions of these actors on different markets. One of the main focuses of the model is to capture the interdependencies between transport costs on goods trade and the spatially distributed economic activities. In this model, goods transport is considered to be a derived demand. That is, transport demand is derived from the need to move goods from one location to another, from the suppliers to the demanders of the goods. The model is built on the framework of monopolistic competition. We will now give a somewhat more extensive description of the model, yet for a full description of the model (Sundberg, 2009, see). Regarding the firms, it is assumed that they act under monopolistic competition. Hence, they maximize profits by choosing their output price and optimal mix of inputs. The inputs to production are intermediate inputs, i.e. goods, possibly purchased from any region and sector, as well as primary inputs in the form of capital and labour. The monopolistically competitive firms maximize their profits, yet in equilibrium we have zero profits due to competition. The zero profit condition yields the level of output of each firm, while market demand determines the number of active firms in any particular region and industry. In each region there is a representative household, which is assumed to behave as if it is utility maximizing. The household earns its income through 8 provision of primary inputs to the firms in the form of labour and capital. The household use all its income on expenditures on the provided goods, which are consumed, but also benefit from leisure. All markets are assumed to be in equilibrium. In the model, all prices adjust to the point where supply meets demand on all markets. Labour markets clear, such that the households’ supply of labour is equal to the firms’ demand for labour, the same holds for the capital market. Goods markets clear, the supply of output from any firm is demanded as a consumption good by the households, as an intermediate input to production in other firms, or it is exported to some foreign country. The goods markets clearing conditions determine the number of active firms in every region and sector. Finally, the model is calibrated to Swedish data such that the National Input/Output structure, representing inter sectoral trade and use of primary input factors as well as final demands, are replicated. The regional distribution of production is also calibrated. Both the National I/O-table and the regional distribution of production are taken from the National Accounts. The transport costs are calibrated to reflect the distribution of transport costs between the different types of goods as given by the Samgods model. 7 Results The source for estimating the different effects A–E is the STRAGO model since FDM only can estimate the indirect effects on the tax base caused by the change in indirect taxation (effect C). Therefore we here present two different CBA’s, with alternative measures for effect C (CBA 1 and CBA 2). CBA 1 is only based on STRAGO whereas in CBA 2 the indirect effect on the indirect tax revenues are exchanged for the estimate from FDM. The two different CBA’s are made for both the kilometre tax (Table 2 on page 10) and the diesel/CO2 tax (Table 3 on page 11). The net social benefit is calculated as follows: net social benefit = MCPF (A + B + C) − D + E where MCPF = 1.32 is also calculated by STRAGO.8 The change in the external effects (E) has been calculated by taking the change in transported kilometres times 2.4 (SEK/km) which is our estimated external cost per vehicle kilometre. The results for the kilometre tax and CO2 -tax differ in magnitude, simply because the kilometre tax represents a larger tax increase, in absolute terms, on transports. In relative terms the two different tax instruments have similar effects. This is an expected result since fuel consumption and vehicle 8 Note that we can calculate the “instrument specific” MCPF for the two tax instruments. In the absence of fixed costs they are given by (D-E)/(A+B+C), which equals 1.18 in CBA 1A, and 1.17 in CBA 2A. 9 Table 2: Results for the kilometre tax (SEK million) Effect A B C D E Net social benefit CBA 1A 3 202 -94 -1130 2 419 84 276 CBA 2A 3 202 -194 965 2 419 84 2 909 kilometres are highly correlated. See cost changes for the two policies in Table 1 on page 3. Given the valuation of 2.4 per vehicle kilometre and the calculated decrease in vehicle kilometres being 35 million kilometres in the case of the kilometre tax and 7.9 million kilometres in the case of the diesel tax, the value of the decrease in external effects is 84 million SEK for the kilometre tax and 19 million SEK for the diesel tax. The reduced cost for deformation and wear (0.11 SEK per vehicle kilometre) would reduce the external effects to 80.1 and 18.9 million SEK respectively; a difference so small that we disregard from the effect. In CBA 1A and CBA 1B, completely performed by means of the STRAGO model, we have a strong direct effect (A), while indirect effects on the tax base (B) are small. The indirect tax base effect on private intermediates (C) differs between CBA 1 and CBA 2. In the STRAGO model we have equilibrium outcomes where higher taxes on transports induce lower tax incomes from intermediates such as labour and capital. There are many forces within the economy that may tip the effect in C either in a negative or a positive direction. Take labour for instance, increasing transport based taxes motivates firms to shift towards using more labour in production in favour of transported goods. If this demand for labour is met it would actually expand the labour tax base. On the other hand, equilibrium requires demand and supply of labour to equilibrate, labour markets clear. From the households’ perspective, increasing transport-taxes on goods makes free time, or leisure, relatively cheap. Thus, the households may shift their consumption toward leisure, which implies that labour supply goes down. Such an effect reduces the labour tax base. Taking both demand and supply side effects into account, in summary, we have a negative equilibrium effect on the tax base of private intermediates. 10 Table 3: Results for the diesel/CO2 tax (SEK million) Effect A B C D E Net social benefit 8 CBA 1B 721 -204 -253 542 19 68 CBA 2B 721 -204 542 19 Conclusions Our calculation implies that the kilometre tax is socio economically profitable. However when the investment and administration cost is added, 350 MSEK per year according to SIKA’s calculations,9 the profitability in the STRAGO-based calculation is slightly negative. It could be noted though that our estimation of the decrease in external effects is lower than SIKA’s, who estimates it to 180-400 MSEK per year. Changing to SIKA’s valuation makes the calculation slightly positive. When we estimate the tax base effect on private intermediate commodities (“C” in our analytical model, i.e. Labour and capital) with the FDM, the net social benefit is extremely positive; since the net social benefit is approximately equal to the tax revenue from the kilometre tax the revenue comes “for free”. The direction of the difference between the partial (FDM) and the general equilibrium (STRAGO) estimates is logical since the equilibrium effects most likely are negative. The in market effect might be positive: increasing transport taxes makes firms replace transports with other production factors. Equilibrium requires market to clear (which counteract the in market effect) and increasing transport taxes makes leisure relatively cheaper (which makes labour supply go down). Even though the sign of the difference is logical, it is hard to verify the size. There is obviously a trade-off between making a detailed calculation of one market and capturing all effects but on a more schematic way. Our calculation for the diesel tax shows a similar pattern, but since it requires no investment cost it is profitable in both calculations. It should be mentioned though that our calculations of the external effects does not capture the differences in benefits from a kilometre tax compared to a fuel tax, i.e. the reasons for making the investment. The differences are that a kilometre tax can levied from all vehicles regardless of nationality (where the tank is filled) and, most importantly, can be differentiated very detailed 9 SIKA (2007). 11 (based on vehicle type, amount of people affected by pollution etc.). It is now well established in the literature that there in an optimal, first best, world is no double dividend from tax instruments. In the real world though, it is an empirical question. Our tests of the kilometre and diesel taxes imply that the critical issue for the existence of a double dividend is the effect on other production factors. References Diamond PA, Mirrlees JA (1971a). “Optimal Taxation and Public Provision 1: Production Efficiency.” American Economic Review, 61, 8–27. Diamond PA, Mirrlees JA (1971b). “Optimal Taxation and Public Provision 2: Tax Rules.” American Economic Review, 61, 261–78. Hammar HT, Lundgren T, Sjöström M (2008). “The significance of transport costs in Swedish forest industry.” Journal of Transport Economics and Policy, 42, 83–104. Hammar HT, Lundgren T, Sjöström M, Andersson M (2011). “The Kilometer Tax and Swedish Industry.” Applied Economics, 43, 2907–2917. Mirrlees JA (1971). “An Exploration in the Theory of Optimum Income Taxation.” Review of Economic Studies, 38, 135–208. Naturvårdsverket (2007). “Klimat, transporter och regioner. En studie om målkonflikter och målsynergier.” Technical report. URL http://www. naturvardsverket.se/Documents/publikationer/620-5710-3.pdf. Pigou AC (1920). The Economics of Welfare. MacMillan and Company, London. Ramsey FP (1927). “A Contribution to the Theory of Taxation.” Economic Journal, 37, 47–61. SIKA (2007). “Kilometerskatt för lastbilar. Kompletterande analyser. Redovisning av ett tilläggsuppdrag från regeringen.” Technical report, Statens institut för kommunikationsanalys. URL http://www.trafa.se/ document/sr_2007_5.pdf. SIKA (2009). “Person- och godstransporter på järnväg, tredje kvartalet 2007. Kvartalststatistik.” Technical report, Statens institut för kommunikationsanalys. URL http://www.trafa.se/document/ss_2008_3. pdf. Sundberg M (2009). The Development of STRAGO - With application to a kilometer tax, pp. xx–yy. Department of Transport and Economics, 12 Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm. ISBN 978-91-85539-43-7. Diss. Stockholm : Kungliga Tekniska högskolan, 2009, URL http://urn.kb. se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-10540. 13 Centrum för transportstudier är ett forskningscentrum vid KTH ett samarbete mellan KTH, VTI, WSP Analys Strategi, Internationella Handelshögskolan Jönköping, Trafikanalys, Trafikverket, Vectura och VINNOVA. Forskningsfältet omfattar bland annat samhällsekonomisk analys, hållbara transportsystem, prognosmodeller, trafiksimulering, transportsystemets finansiering och organisation, samspelet mellan transportsystem och regional ekonomi samt trafikanters beteenden och värderingar. Centret är en tioårig satsning med en total finansiering från parterna på uppåt 250 miljoner kr, oräknat tillkommande externa uppdrag. Verksamheten sysselsätter motsvarande minst 20 heltidstjänster, oräknat de många forskare vid de olika parterna som har sin finansiering på annat sätt, och har en gemensam lokalisering på KTH:s campus. The Centre for Transport Studies is new research centre at KTH cooperation between KTH, VTI, WSP Analysis Strategy, Jönköping International Business School, Transport Analysis, Transport Administration, Vectura and VINNOVA. The research area includes cost-benefit analysis, sustainable transport systems, transport modelling, simulation, financing and organisation, interactions between the transport system and the regional economy, and travellers’ behaviour and valuations. The Centre is ten-year project comprising almost 250 million SEK, not counting additional research grants. The centre employs around 20 full-time equivalents, in addition to the researchers at the partners funded in other ways, and has joint location at KTH campus. Centre for Transport Studies SE-100 44 Stockholm Sweden www.cts.kth.se