Abstract

This paper investigates the impact of local traffic pollution on the formation of residential and business districts. While firms benefit from local production externalities, households commute to their workplaces with private vehicles and exert a local pollution externality on the residents living along the urban transport networks. The spatial location of firms and residents endogenously results from the trade-off between the production and pollution externalities and the commuting costs. The analysis shows that in monocentric cities the benefits associated with a fall in per-vehicle pollution are absorbed by rents paid to absentee landlords. When a city includes business and residential districts as well as a district mixing both agents, a lower per-vehicle pollution enlarges the residential districts and shifts the business districts closer to the geographical center of the city. The paper finally studies the optimal city structure. The first-best policies that fully internalize the externalities still foster business agglomeration.

Highlights

  • In the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the United Nations promote efforts to ensure the successful management of rapid urban growth (United Nations, 2018)

  • The current urban trends point toward higher car dependence and longer commuting distances (OECD, 2018), which clearly leads to higher levels of air pollution

  • We aim to investigate the trade-off between production externalities, commuting cost and traffic pollution, derive the equilibrium and the optimal urban configurations, and discuss policies that decentralize the optimal structure as an equilibrium outcome

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Summary

Introduction

In the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the United Nations promote efforts to ensure the successful management of rapid urban growth (United Nations, 2018). While 55% of the world’s population live today in urban areas, 68% are expected to reside in urban areas by 2050 (United Nations, 2018). Such a rapid urban development offers a unique opportunity to design sustainable urban planning and reform land-use policies. The current urban trends point toward higher car dependence and longer commuting distances (OECD, 2018), which clearly leads to higher levels of air pollution. Around 3 million deaths are attributed to ambient air pollution annually. In 2012, one out of nine deaths was caused by air pollution-related conditions (WHO, 2016). In Austria, France, and Switzerland, air pollution is estimated to cause 6% of total mortality and about half of these

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