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Political acceptability is the primary obstacle to implementation of road pricing in many cities. This paper studies the political economy of urban road pricing in its most common incarnation: cordon tolling. We relate voters' preferences for the road toll to its impact on the city's land...
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This paper studies the political economy of cordon tolls, the most common form of road pricing in cities. We consider a monocentric city inhabited by renters and resident-landowners. A cordon toll raises the rental price of land within the cordon, and it reduces rents outside this area. Hence,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011350197
. The model accounts for the special interests of downtown retailers and competing superstores at the edge of the city, and …, extending the model to allow for lobbying by residents within the downtown retail district we find that residents may lobby for …
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