The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is always detrimental to consumers. We show indeed that, although transport deregulation is beneficial to consumers as long as the location of economic activity is fixed, this is no longer true when, in the long run, firms and workers are freely mobile. The reason is that the static gains due to less monopoly power in the transport sector may well map into dynamic dead-weight losses because deregulation of the transport sector leads to more inefficient agglomeration. This latter change may, quite surprisingly, increase consumer prices in some regions, despite a more competitive transport sector. Transport deregulation is shown to map into aggregate ...
Because the demand for the transport services stems from that for the final goods, the sizes of the ...
Economic deregulation of local bus services remains controversial in terms of the claimed gains and ...
This research focuses on Great Britain’s experience with deregulation of urban bus transit services....
The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is alwa...
The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is alwa...
The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is alwa...
The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is alwa...
This paper builds a theory of deregulation and roll-out of on-road competition in the public transpo...
Although transport costs are a key-ingredient of New Economic Geography, the transport sector is usu...
The concept of ‘deregulating’ transport industries is examined, drawing examples from the principal ...
Markets for transport are often characterised by unequal demand in both directions: every morning du...
The pure free market will theoretically result in economic efficiency being achieved. At the heart o...
The pure free market will theoretically result in economic efficiency being achieved. At the heart o...
Because the demand for the transport services stems from that for the final goods, the sizes of the ...
Economic deregulation of local bus services remains controversial in terms of the claimed gains and ...
This research focuses on Great Britain’s experience with deregulation of urban bus transit services....
The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is alwa...
The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is alwa...
The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is alwa...
The aim of this paper is to qualify the claim that regulating a competitive transport sector is alwa...
This paper builds a theory of deregulation and roll-out of on-road competition in the public transpo...
Although transport costs are a key-ingredient of New Economic Geography, the transport sector is usu...
The concept of ‘deregulating’ transport industries is examined, drawing examples from the principal ...
Markets for transport are often characterised by unequal demand in both directions: every morning du...
The pure free market will theoretically result in economic efficiency being achieved. At the heart o...
The pure free market will theoretically result in economic efficiency being achieved. At the heart o...
Because the demand for the transport services stems from that for the final goods, the sizes of the ...
Economic deregulation of local bus services remains controversial in terms of the claimed gains and ...
This research focuses on Great Britain’s experience with deregulation of urban bus transit services....