1 / 15

Travel Cost Model: an example

Travel Cost Model: an example. Sittidaj Pongkivorasin Faculty of Economics, Chulalongkorn University. Total Economic Value. Use Value. Non-Use Value. Option Value. Direct. Indirect. Existence. Bequest. Economic Value. Valuation Method. Indirect. Direct. Benefit Transfer. Market

Download Presentation

Travel Cost Model: an example

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Travel Cost Model: an example Sittidaj Pongkivorasin Faculty of Economics, Chulalongkorn University

  2. Total Economic Value Use Value Non-Use Value Option Value Direct Indirect Existence Bequest Economic Value

  3. Valuation Method Indirect Direct Benefit Transfer Market - Preventive expenditure - Avoidance cost - etc. Surrogate - Travel Cost - Hedonic CVM CM Valuation Method

  4. Concept Ordinary demand curve, p1 CS

  5. Cost/trip trips Travel demand

  6. Travel Cost Model (TCM) • TCM uses the cost of traveling to a site as a means of inferring the recreational benefits which that site provided. • TCM can be used: • to measure the use value of a recreation area or historic site. • to estimate increases in the use value if the site were improved. • Changes in travel cost will cause a variation in the quantity of visits. Observation of these variations across individuals will permit the estimation of demand functions and of the value of the site.

  7. Assumptions • The cost of travel + cost of time are a proxi for recreational value • The “number of visits” which is the decision variable in the model is assumed to be “the trip of equal length” for each visit and each sample. • Visiting the site is assumed for the “single purpose” which is for recreation. • Number of visits to the site and the quality of the site are assumed “complement”. More visits are expected when the quality is improved.

  8. 2 types of TCM • Individual TCM • Zonal TCM • Both shares the same idea…

  9. Individual TCM • Number of visits = q • Cost of a visit = p • Estimate vj = total number of visit. cj = the visit cost xj = all other factors

  10. Steps in estimating a single site model • Define the site to be valued • Define the recreation uses and seasons • Develop a sampling strategy (on-site vs. off-site) • Specify the model (variables asked) • Decide on the treatment of multiple purpose trips (remove, partial) • Design and implement the survey • Measure trip cost (travel, access fee, equipment, cost of time) • Estimate the model (OLS, Poisson) • Calculate access value Source: Markandya

  11. An example Visits/1000 = 300 – 7.755 * Travel Costs

  12. An entrance fee of 10 Euro So now we have two points on our demand curve.

  13. Advantages of TCM • Based on market price • Actual observed behavior • Inexpensive • Easy to interpret

  14. Issues and Limitations • Single purpose trip • Opportunity cost of time • Substitution site • On-site interview  Sampling bias • Need enough distance to make the difference

More Related