Compact or Spread-Out Cities: Urban Planning, Taxation, and the Vulnerability to Transportation Shocks
29 Pages Posted: 4 Mar 2007
Date Written: February 2007
Abstract
This paper shows that cities made more compact by transportation taxation are more robust than spread-out cities to shocks in transportation costs. Such a shock, indeed, entails negative transition effects that are caused by housing infrastructure inertia and are magnified in low-density cities. Distortions due to a transportation tax, however, have in absence of shock detrimental consequences that need to be accounted for. The range of beneficial tax levels can, therefore, be identified as a function of the possible magnitude of future shocks in transportation costs. These taxation levels, which can reach significant values, reduce city vulnerability and prevent lock-ins in under-optimal situations.
Keywords: Urban transportation, Housing, Inertia, Vulnerability, Transportation Taxation
JEL Classification: R21, R48, H23, H31
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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