Vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation

Among the few papers that have studied intermodal competition and cooperation between high-speed rail (HSR) and airlines from an analytical point of view, it is assumed that the two modes are horizontally differentiated. However, empirical evidence seems to suggest that the two modes are vertically...

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Main Author: Xia, Wenyi
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54597
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-545972018-01-05T17:28:28Z Vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation Xia, Wenyi Among the few papers that have studied intermodal competition and cooperation between high-speed rail (HSR) and airlines from an analytical point of view, it is assumed that the two modes are horizontally differentiated. However, empirical evidence seems to suggest that the two modes are vertically differentiated. The aim of this thesis is to study the effects of vertical differentiation between HSR and airlines on fares, traffic volumes and social welfare. The analysis is done for both competition and cooperation scenarios, and is conducted in an asymmetric network with hub airport runways being potentially capacity constrained. We find that an improvement in rail speed or air-rail connecting time will lead to a decrease of air fare on the routes where HSR and airlines compete. Furthermore, HSR-airlines competition in the connecting markets may result in airlines charging higher-than-monopoly price in the markets where HSR is not present. Although HSR-airlines cooperation can eliminate this kind of negative impacts, cooperation harms social welfare in the markets where HSR and airlines are both present. Intermodal cooperation benefits some markets while disadvantaging others. In terms of overall social welfare in the network, we suggest that intermodal cooperation should be encouraged if (1) the markets, where air transport is the only mode, are much larger than the other markets; or (2) the connecting markets are much larger than the other markets and airlines cannot serve all markets in the network due to insufficient hub airport runway capacity. Otherwise, intermodal competition should be encouraged. Business, Sauder School of Graduate 2015-08-24T17:58:42Z 2015-08-24T17:58:42Z 2015 2015-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54597 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Among the few papers that have studied intermodal competition and cooperation between high-speed rail (HSR) and airlines from an analytical point of view, it is assumed that the two modes are horizontally differentiated. However, empirical evidence seems to suggest that the two modes are vertically differentiated. The aim of this thesis is to study the effects of vertical differentiation between HSR and airlines on fares, traffic volumes and social welfare. The analysis is done for both competition and cooperation scenarios, and is conducted in an asymmetric network with hub airport runways being potentially capacity constrained. We find that an improvement in rail speed or air-rail connecting time will lead to a decrease of air fare on the routes where HSR and airlines compete. Furthermore, HSR-airlines competition in the connecting markets may result in airlines charging higher-than-monopoly price in the markets where HSR is not present. Although HSR-airlines cooperation can eliminate this kind of negative impacts, cooperation harms social welfare in the markets where HSR and airlines are both present. Intermodal cooperation benefits some markets while disadvantaging others. In terms of overall social welfare in the network, we suggest that intermodal cooperation should be encouraged if (1) the markets, where air transport is the only mode, are much larger than the other markets; or (2) the connecting markets are much larger than the other markets and airlines cannot serve all markets in the network due to insufficient hub airport runway capacity. Otherwise, intermodal competition should be encouraged. === Business, Sauder School of === Graduate
author Xia, Wenyi
spellingShingle Xia, Wenyi
Vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation
author_facet Xia, Wenyi
author_sort Xia, Wenyi
title Vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation
title_short Vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation
title_full Vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation
title_fullStr Vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation
title_full_unstemmed Vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation
title_sort vertical differentiation between airline and high-speed rail : the effects on intermodal competition and cooperation
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54597
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