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The pandemic has made car addiction three times worse.
Drivers are valuing their access to a private vehicle during the pandemic more than three times as much as they did before COVID-19 but they can be persuaded to get around without a car with simple changes to incentivize other modes, a new study finds.
To understand why some Americans still choose to pay to maintain a private vehicle even when robust public transportation networks are right outside their door, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology surveyed around 1,000 people each in the transit-rich cities of Washington, Chicago, and Seattle. (They also spoke with 1,000 people in mostly-car-dominated Dallas, though for the record, its light rail system boasts surprisingly high ridership.) Then the researchers offered the subjects a series of hypothetical cash bribes in randomized amounts to give up their cars for up to a year and also asked them whether theyd take the same deal if theyd been offered thoseincentives prior to the pandemic.
And the offers werent limited to cold, hard cash alone. Later in the survey, the researchers tempted respondents with access to a free, ubiquitously available ride-hailing service in exchange for giving up their private vehicles essentially, a gratis private car service that might sometimes require a very brief wait.
What the researchers found was astonishing: Even prior to the pandemic, drivers said theyd need a whopping $11,200 on average to entice them to give up immediate, 24/7 access to their personal cars. Even if they had a free, high-quality e-taxi at their beck and call, the respondents said theyd need around $6,500 in compensation to give up their car ownership. And during COVID-19, they said theyd need $3,300 every single month thats $39,600 over the course of 12 months just to say goodbye to an object that already costs the average U.S. drivers $9,300 a year just to finance, fuel, insure, store, and maintain.
Put another way: weve created a society thats so paralyzingly car-dependent (and so convinced of the myth of COVID-19 risks on public transit, not to mention taxis and other modes) that the average American earning the median income of $68,703 would need a cash payout of the equivalent of 71 percent of her total annual pay in order to even considergiving up a private vehicle during a year-long pandemic.
And even without a virus, that same would-be car-free commuter would still ask for a cash payout equivalent to the cost of an average years worth ofgroceries,health insurance, andelectric bills, plus a round trip flight to Paris.
How option value helps decode the psychology of American car dependenceThe finding is a fascinating example of how human behavior is shaped by the power of option value a wonky economics term that refers to the dollar value that people place on having the option to use a good or service if they chose to do so, as distinct from the money someone will pay toactuallyuse that thing.
The term is usually applied to stuff like a residents willingness to pay a tax to maintain a local park he or she might only visit once in a blue moon, but option value is a powerful and under-examined feature of consumer psychology, too. And it definitely helps explain drivers willingness to spend an average of 9.2 percent of their household income on a hunk of metal that sits parked 95 percent of the time and why, during the age of mass quarantines, work from home, and historically low vehicle miles travelled, they value their wheels even more.
When we isolated how much drivers valued car ownership on its own, [independent of the value they placed on actually being able to drive that car], we found that it was about $6,500 in a typical year before the pandemic, said Joanna Moody, research program manager for MITs Mobility Systems Center and one of the authors on the study. That means only 58 percent of the perceived value of car ownership actually comes from ownership itself not use.
So if drivers dont value their cars simply because theyre useful and often, outright necessary to navigate our auto-dependent cities, why do they insist on pouring money down the gas tank, even if they live in a transit-rich city like D.C.? Moody says that option value as well as intangible factors like social status, privacy, and emotional and symbolic connections to car ownership all play a role and right now, the terrifying uncertainty of the pandemic is a major factor, too.
Car ownership is a security blanket, Moody says. The more risk-averse we are, and the more unpredictable our travel needs are, the more attractive the flexibility, reliability, and control that comes with car ownership becomes. Especially right now, people are asking themselves: what if I need to get to the hospital at a moments notice? What if transit service is cut because of the pandemic and I cant make it to work? Its really about having the option of being able to take the car when they might need it thats so important to people even if they dont actually do it much at all.
How to lower the value of easy driving
Of course, even without a major public health disaster, our car-dominated places essentially force Americans to maintain a constant state of disaster-preparedness hemorrhaging money to maintain massive overkill vehicles that can meet our every conceivable mobility need, despite what they cost our families and our society.
But if our cities had networks of strong mass and shared transportation options that could collectively make us feel confident we could get anywhere we need to go with comfort and ease, experts think could help level the playing field.
Image: PinterestUltimately, how we make our transportation lifestyle choices isnt just about our day-to-day travel, Moody said. Its about those extremes, those What if scenarios: What if I need to travel somewhere further away for a weekend? What if I get sick suddenly and need to visit a clinic?
Of course, the lesson of option value isnt that we simply need to write drivers checks to choose more sustainable ways to get around. Moody saysIts more about making all other modes more convenient and attractive in every way and that includes land-use reforms that put both basic anddesirable destinations within easy reach by foot, bike or transit, rather than simply making that bus ride to your far-flung workplace a tiny bit faster or cheaper.
In the longer term, its really about land-use planning shaping our transportation systems to be less car-dependent in a comprehensive way, Moody said. For the majority of Americans, buying a car is a rational choice, and thats because weve built the system to be that wayOur study focused on the value we place on car ownership and car use, but we also looked at how people valued other urban mobility options in their cities, and each of the alternative modes were valued at under a $100 each or less. Thats transit access, ride-hailing, bike share, scootershare everything. Were a long way from providing a package of transportation alternatives in cities that, together, give consumers the same value as the private car.
Fortunately, wecan raise the option value on sustainable travel by improving service quality and coverage and even truly revolutionary public investments in other modes would be hell of a lot cheaper than continuing to subsidize driving like we do now. Andwith countless human lives and the fate of the planet at stake, we must do everything we can.
Read more from the original source:
The Real Reason Why Drivers Are Convinced They Can't Do Without Cars - Streetsblog New York
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