Keresés
Keresés
Close this search box.

hu / en

Az innováció és a mesterséges intelligencia korában is számít, hol élünk - interjú Lengyel Balázzsal Tovább olvasom

Tovább olvasom

Négy kutatónk pályázata nyert az NKFIH - Nemzeti Kutatási, Fejlesztési és Innovációs Hivatal Tudományos Mecenatúra programjában Tovább olvasom

Tovább olvasom

China in Northern Europe and the Arctic: Economic Cooperation and Strategic Concerns - Szunomár Ágnes cikke a Baltic Rim Economies folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

Tovább olvasom

Caring Communities in Urban Hungary: A Civil Society Perspective  – Gábriel Dóra és szerzőtársai cikke a Social Inclusion folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

Tovább olvasom

CAP subsidies, technical efficiency, and its persistence: evidence from Slovenian animal farms - Fertő Imre és szerzőtársai cikke megjelent a Journal of Productivity Analysis folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

Tovább olvasom

Vége a nagy álmoknak: mégsem a hidrogén hozza el a zöld áttörést a közlekedésben? Szabó John cikke a KRTK blogban a Portfolion Tovább olvasom

Tovább olvasom

KTI szeminárium: Hörcher Dániel – Transport interventions in general equilibrium: Bridging transport research with quantitative spatial economics

 

 

KTI szemináriumi terem; 13.00-14.00

Előadó: Hörcher Dániel

Daniel Hörcher is postdoctoral research associate at the Transport Strategy Centre (TSC) within the Centre for Transport Studies (CTS) at Imperial College London.

Cím:

Transport interventions in general equilibrium:

Bridging transport research with quantitative spatial economics

Abstract

As one of the most impactful applications of microeconomic theory and empirical research, major transport investments in the United Kingdom and the European Union must be justified in a welfare economic analysis, following official guidelines called the transport appraisal methodology. However, this consensual method is currently restricted to partial equilibrium, creating a natural need to explore the spatial general equilibrium impact of transport interventions. The emerging literature of quantitative spatial models (QSMs) offers a theoretically consistent and empirically relevant framework to rationalise observed spatial outcomes as the equilibrium of a geographically detailed model and perform counterfactual simulations of hypothetical place-based policies. In this research we explore whether QSMs may at some point replace current practices in transport appraisal, and what methodological developments are necessary for the state-of-the-art representation of the transport market in a spatial model. As a proof of concept we develop and quantify a QSM in which commuters’ travel time valuation is an endogenous outcome of their choice of residence and workplace locations and the monetary and time constraints they face. Through this illustrative model, the talk provides a general introduction to the emerging subdiscipline of transport economics for a generalist audience.

 

 

2026

Jún

25

H

K

Sz

Cs

P

Sz

V

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

1

2

3

4

5

Következő hónap >
2023.06.22. - 2023.06.22. | KTI szemináriumi terem