Accessibility and transport infrastructure improvement assessment: the role of borders and multilateral resistance
2015
The market potential indicator is a commonly used tool in transport planning for evaluating
the potential economic effects derived from improvements in transport infrastructures.
The general assumption is that exports from a given region will rise with increased accessibility,
thus benefiting economic activities. However, the specification of the market
potential model is typically very simple and ignores both the impact of competing rivals
and the role of international borders, which leads to unrealistic results. Spatial interaction
models on bilateral trade have already proved that international trade is affected by
multilateral resistance, borders, adjacency, language or currency. Nevertheless, apart from
some recent analyses that simply calibrate the distance decay parameter from trade datasets,
these variables have hardly been integrated into research on market potential. This
paper sets out to demonstrate that more realistic results are obtained by calibrating the
distance-decay parameter and introducing the impact of competing rivals and border
effects into the market potential formulation. The proposed model is then applied to the
assessment of the accessibility impacts of new road transport infrastructure in the
European Union between 2001 and 2012, which shows that the greatest improvements
in accessibility were experienced by peripheral countries with high road infrastructure
investment.
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