How poor land use planning has created an unfixable problem for transport: a case study of the City of Johannesburg
Access status:
Open Access
Type
Working PaperAuthor/s
Pisa, NoleenHo, Chinh Q.
Hensher, David A.
Luke, Rose
Heyns, Gert
Mageto, Joash
Chakamera, Chengete
Abstract
Rapid urbanisation and apartheid‐era land-use legacies leave many South Africans captive to long, costly, and unsafe commutes. Yet rigorous evidence on how township residents value transport attributes is scarce. This study addresses that gap with the first high-quality stated-preference ...
See moreRapid urbanisation and apartheid‐era land-use legacies leave many South Africans captive to long, costly, and unsafe commutes. Yet rigorous evidence on how township residents value transport attributes is scarce. This study addresses that gap with the first high-quality stated-preference dataset for commuting in South Africa. Using an efficient best-worst design, 201 face-to-face interviews were conducted in Soweto, eliciting dual responses on cost, in-vehicle time, first/last-mile effort, comfort and safety for both public and private transport options. Mixed-logit best-worst models capture unobserved taste heterogeneity and deliver the country’s first mode-specific elasticities and willingness-to-pay measures. Results show no systematic behavioural differences between workers and adult students. Instead, attribute valuations are dominated by safety concerns. The willingness to pay for a “very safe” service is over four times that for a one-hour reduction in travel time. Elasticities confirm that safety improvements have the greatest potential to shift demand, whereas marginal fare increases sharply deter low-income users. The findings stress that enhancing perceived and actual safety is a prerequisite for sustainable mode shift in Gauteng. They also provide policy-ready parameters for appraisal of bus, rail and minibus-taxi upgrades in similarly segregated African cities.
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See moreRapid urbanisation and apartheid‐era land-use legacies leave many South Africans captive to long, costly, and unsafe commutes. Yet rigorous evidence on how township residents value transport attributes is scarce. This study addresses that gap with the first high-quality stated-preference dataset for commuting in South Africa. Using an efficient best-worst design, 201 face-to-face interviews were conducted in Soweto, eliciting dual responses on cost, in-vehicle time, first/last-mile effort, comfort and safety for both public and private transport options. Mixed-logit best-worst models capture unobserved taste heterogeneity and deliver the country’s first mode-specific elasticities and willingness-to-pay measures. Results show no systematic behavioural differences between workers and adult students. Instead, attribute valuations are dominated by safety concerns. The willingness to pay for a “very safe” service is over four times that for a one-hour reduction in travel time. Elasticities confirm that safety improvements have the greatest potential to shift demand, whereas marginal fare increases sharply deter low-income users. The findings stress that enhancing perceived and actual safety is a prerequisite for sustainable mode shift in Gauteng. They also provide policy-ready parameters for appraisal of bus, rail and minibus-taxi upgrades in similarly segregated African cities.
See less
Date
2025-05-30Licence
Copyright All Rights ReservedFaculty/School
The University of Sydney Business School, Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies (ITLS)Share