Disaggregate Journey-to-Work Data: Implications for Excess Commuting and Jobs–Housing Balance
- 1 December 2005
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
- Vol. 37 (12) , 2233-2252
- https://doi.org/10.1068/a37312
Abstract
Much of the analysis to date on the topic of excess commuting and jobs–housing balance deals with total commuting flow, undifferentiated with respect to worker and job characteristics. In this paper we explicitly address the disaggregation issue in terms of job and worker heterogeneity and show how to incorporate such details into the analysis of excess commuting. The objectives of this paper are (1) to develop a trip-distribution model disaggregating journey-to-work data according to type of occupation in order to estimate actual commutes; (2) to develop a disaggregated version of a linear program to measure theoretical minimum and maximum commutes; and, (3) to verify variations in excess commuting and jobs–housing balance according to type of occupation. Results of actual trip-length distributions for each occupation vary from 3.72 to 5 miles for Boise, Idaho, and from 4.27 to 7.78 miles for Wichita, Kansas. Minimum commutes vary from 0.95 to 3.58 miles and from 1.5 to 3.79 miles for Boise and Wichita, respectively. These results imply nonuniform levels of excess commuting and jobs/workers ratios. The proposed models are expected to have a wide range of uses in measurement and assessment of empirical patterns of commuting. The scope of the disaggregation can be extended to other targets, such as different types of industry, household structure, income level, ethnic background, education level, transportation mode, and gender. Further dimensions of disaggregation can address spatial interactions of different socioeconomic groups in urban areas, and, more generally, contribute to exploring urban sprawl according to job characteristics and industries.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spatial choices and excess commuting: a case study of bank tellers in Bogotá, ColombiaJournal of Transport Geography, 2003
- Commute minimization in the Greater Toronto Area: applying a modified excess commuteJournal of Transport Geography, 2002
- Extensions to the Concept of Excess CommutingEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 2002
- Model‐based incomplete data analysis with an application to occupational mobility and migration accountsMathematical Population Studies, 1999
- Accessibility and the journey to workJournal of Transport Geography, 1998
- Jobs-Housing Balance Revisited: Trends and Impacts in the San Francisco Bay AreaJournal of the American Planning Association, 1996
- Excess Commuting for Two-Worker Households in the Los Angeles Metropolitan AreaJournal of Urban Economics, 1995
- Excess Commuting in the Tokyo Metropolitan Area: Measurement and Policy SimulationsUrban Studies, 1995
- Wasteful commuting: A re-examinationJournal of Urban Economics, 1991
- Advances and problems in distribution modellingTransportation Research, 1970