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Direct and indirect influences on employed adults’ travel in the UK: New insights from the National Travel Survey data 2002–2010


Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Jahanshahi, Kaveh 
Williams, Ian 

Abstract

Recent years saw a continuing shift in labour force composition, e.g. greater participation of women and a prominent rise in part-time workers. There are as yet relatively few recent studies that examine systematically the influences on the travel of employed adults from such perspectives, particularly regarding possible transport disadvantages of the fastest growing segments of workers. A robust analysis requires systematic data on a wide range of explanatory variables and multiple travel outcomes including accessibility, mobility and trip frequency for different trip purposes. The UK NTS data does meet the majority of this demanding data requirement, but its full use has so far been hampered by methodological difficulties. To overcome complex endogeneity problems, we develop novel, integrated structural equation models (SEMs) to uncover the influences of latent land use characteristics, indirect influences on car ownership, interactions among trip purposes as well as residents’ self-selection and spatial sorting. This general-purpose method provides a new, systematic decomposition of the influences on travel outcomes, where the effects of each variable can be examined in turn with robust error terms. The new insights underline two direct policy implications. First, it highlights the contributions of land use planning and urban design in restraining travel demand in the 2000s, and their increasing influence over the decade. Secondly, it shows that there may still be a large mobility disadvantage among the fastest growing segments of workers, particularly in dense urban areas. This research further investigates trend breaking influences before and after 2007 through grouped SEM models, as a test of the methodology for producing regular and timely updates regarding the main influences on personal travel from a system level.

Description

Keywords

structural equation modelling, UK National Travel Survey, accessibility, mobility, trip frequency, car ownership

Journal Title

Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0965-8564

Volume Title

80

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/K000314/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/L010917/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/I019308/1)
The authors wish to acknowledge inspiring comments and advice from Dr Jan Stochl of Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge. Kaveh Jahanshahi wishes to acknowledge the support of an EPSRC Doctoral Training Grant. Ying Jin and Ian Williams wishes to acknowledge the funding support of the EPSRC Centre for Smart Infrastructure and Construction at Cambridge University (EPSRC reference EP/K000314/1).