Abstract
This research develops multinomial logit models (MNL) of residential location choice for two-worker households in the San Francisco Bay Metropolitan Area to identify household characteristics that account for the relative differences in household sensitivity to female and male commutes when making residential choices. The results reveal that presence of children, occupation of the male worker, and the relative order of the last residential change and the last change in the female worker's workplace are important determinants of female and male commuting time parameters in household residential location utility functions.
Published Version
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