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POSSIBILITY OF MOBILITY MANAGEMENT IN ASIAN COUNTRIES

POSSIBILITY OF MOBILITY MANAGEMENT IN ASIAN COUNTRIES. Authors: H. Tan VAN, Kasem CHOOCHARUKUL and Satoshi FUJII*. Tokyo Institute of Technology - Department of Civil Engineering JSPS-DOST 3 rd Symposium – March, 2009. Research Group 2.

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POSSIBILITY OF MOBILITY MANAGEMENT IN ASIAN COUNTRIES

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  1. POSSIBILITY OF MOBILITY MANAGEMENT IN ASIAN COUNTRIES Authors: H. Tan VAN, Kasem CHOOCHARUKUL and Satoshi FUJII* Tokyo Institute of Technology - Department of Civil Engineering JSPS-DOST 3rd Symposium – March, 2009

  2. Research Group 2 • Target problems = environmental problem due to traffic, traffic congestion, quality of public transport, traffic safety etc… • measures = urban development management coercive traffic measures investment to public transport system mobility management (=communication)

  3. Background - Mobility management (MM) • MM is an effective strategy with promising results for promoting sustainable transport use. (e.g. TFP in Japan, TravelSmart in Australia & UK, MOST in EU countries) • If MM is properly combined with structural measures, the effectiveness would be achieved at a highest level. • Economic benefit: costs much less than ‘hard’ measures such as infrastructure building.  Important to Asian developing cities with low budget.

  4. Attitudinal factors of travel mode use • Car and public transport generally possess three functions: • symbolic, instrumental, and affective Steg (2003), Elleway et al. (2003), Hiscock et al. (2002) etc. +Symbolic status is the expression of personal identity. +Instrumental aspects are mainly related to functional attributes. +Affective motives can be considered as emotional feelings. • Van & Fujii (2006) found 3 basic aspects of attitudes toward car and public transport in 6 Asian countries: Symbolic-affective, instrumental and social orderliness.

  5. 3 basic aspects found in Asian countries Car Public transport Symbolic-affective Instrumental Social orderliness

  6. Possibility of MM in Asian countries • In developed countries,attitudes are among the determinants of the decision of commuting mode choice. (Kuppam et al., 1999). • How do attitudinal factors affect mode choice in Asian countries? • Whether we can use MM to impact attitudes for inducing changes in travel mode choice? Research questions:  We test the relationships between the 3 attitudinal variables found in 6 Asian countries and intention of mode choice.

  7. MNL Model using the entire sample from 6 countries # p < 0.1, * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001 • All the attitudinal factors were significant determinants of behavioral intention of commuting mode choice. • The effects of attitudinal variables for car were larger than for public transport.

  8. MNL Models using separate sample of each country - CAR # p < 0.1, * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001 • Symbolic affective and instrumental aspects of attitudes toward car were significant determinants of behavioral intention to commute by car in Japan, China, Vietnam. • Social orderliness aspect of attitude toward car was important in China and Vietnam.

  9. MNL Models using separate sample of each country - PT # p < 0.1, * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001 • The social orderliness aspect of public transport was significant to all developing countries, except for Japan. • In country such as the Philippines, where there is a strong bias desire for car, all psychological factors were insignificantfor both car and PT.

  10. Conclusions 1) All attitudinal factors were significantly related to the behavioral intention regarding commuting mode choice 2) Attitudinal factors affected travel behavior in developing Asian countries less than in Japan.  Psychological measures, such as mobility management, might not be as effective as in Japan. 3) Still, some attitudinal factors significantly affect travel behavior even in Asian countries (except for the Philippines).  We would be able to develop effective psychological measures for behavioral change even in Asian countries.

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