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Open Access Publications from the University of California

The Berkeley Program on Housing and Urban Policy was established in the fall of 1998 to promote academic excellence and national leadership in housing studies and the application of knowledge to urban policy. The Program involves academic and professional leaders to further its research and educational objectives. The Program supports economic research and teaching throughout the campus on urban development and policy. The Program arranges internships for professional students and encourages closer links between the university and the community of urban professionals.

Cover page of Political and Public Acceptability of Congestion Pricing: Ideology and Self Interest

Political and Public Acceptability of Congestion Pricing: Ideology and Self Interest

(2010)

Studies of the “stated preferences” of households generally report public and political opposition by urban commuters to congestion pricing. It is thought that this opposition inhibits or precludes tolls and pricing systems that would enhance efficiency in the use of scarce roadways. This paper analyzes the only case in which road pricing was decided by a citizen referendum on the basis of experience with a specific pricing system. The city of Stockholm introduced a toll system for 7 months in 2006, after which citizens voted on its permanent adoption. We match precinct voting records to resident commute times and costs by traffic zone, and we analyze patterns of voting in response to economic and political incentives. We document political and ideological incentives for citizen choice, but we also find that the pattern of time savings and incremental costs exerts a powerful influence on voting behavior.

In this instance, at least, citizen voters behave as if they value commute time highly. When they have experienced first-hand the out-of-pocket costs and time-savings of a specific pricing scheme, they are prepared to adopt freely policies that reduce congestion on urban motorways.

Cover page of Regional Public Finance and Economic Development: the Indonesian Context

Regional Public Finance and Economic Development: the Indonesian Context

(1990)

This paper considers the relative centralization or decentralization of public finance, and relates the equity and efficiency issues ot the special features of developing economies. The paper considers the centralization of taxation and service provision in Indonesia in relation to these theoretical prinicples and indicates ways in which we may expect decentralization to proceed in the Indonesian context.