Discussion paper

DP13291 Mobility and congestion in urban India

We develop a methodology to estimate robust city level vehicular mobility indices, and apply it to 154 Indian cities using 22 million counterfactual trips measured by a web mapping service. There is wide variation in mobility across cities. An exact decomposition shows this variation is driven more by differences in uncongested mobility than congestion. Under plausible assumptions, a one standard deviation improvement in uncongested speed creates much more mobility than optimal congestion pricing. Denser and more populated cities are slower, only in part because of congestion. Urban economic development is correlated with better (uncongested and overall) mobility despite worse congestion.

£6.00
Citation

Duranton, G, V Couture, P Akbar and A Storeygard (2018), ‘DP13291 Mobility and congestion in urban India‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 13291. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp13291