Authors: Alan Carlin and R.E. Park (1970) Presented by: Jared Hayden.
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Transcript of Authors: Alan Carlin and R.E. Park (1970) Presented by: Jared Hayden.
Marginal Cost Pricing of Airport Runway
CapacityAuthors: Alan Carlin and R.E. Park (1970)
Presented by: Jared Hayden
Leading up to 1970, quickly growing demand for airport runways began to exceed the amount of available capacity in some major cities
Resulted in intolerably long delays and additional costs to airlines◦ Most notably, LaGuardia airport in New York City◦ Chicago and Washington experienced similar
problems The study looks at pricing and
administrative mechanisms to help alleviate the congestion at peak times
Background
Paper written in 1970 using data from April 1967 through March 1968 (1 full year)
Paper Examines New York’s LaGuardia Airport Study divided into 2 sections
◦ 1. Develops a model for marginal delay (congestion costs) for La Guardia
◦ 2. Explores the use of congestion tolls and administrative controls to solve the short-term congestion problem
Examines the possibilities of full marginal cost pricing, proportional cost pricing, administrative measures, and combinations of each
Introduction
What are the congestion costs that an additional user would impose on others?
Equivalently, what would the saving to others be if one fewer plane were to use LaGuardia?
During a busy period, each user imposes some delay on following users until the end of the busy period
Equivalently, an additional user shoves users behind him back one space in the queue until the queue dissipates
Paper aims to model such airport activity
Marginal Cost Delays
Ci = delay costs imposed by a user of type i on other users at time t
B(t) = remaining minutes in busy period
i = specifies type of plane and whether its landing or taking off
m = different types of use Si = absolute service times Ni = number of operations
from each type Si and Ni are transformed to si
= Si/S1 and ni = Ni/N1 ◦ Relative terms more feasible to
estimate
The ModelFour types of operations:• i=1, air carrier landings• i=2, air carrier takeoffs• i=3, general aviation landings• i=4, general aviation takeoffs
Divide by S1N1
*Ci / B = marginal cost per minute of remaining busy period
To simplify estimation, many daily fluctuations are not taken into account by the data◦ i.e. n’s, s’s and c’s all vary throughout day
Carlin and Park to not believe the added complexities would add significant precision to model
Thus, the model aims to estimate all values as yearly averages◦ The lone exception is B(t), which is estimated for
each hour of the day.
Assumptions for Empirical Estimates
Traffic proportions, ni : obtained from aggregate traffic statistics available for 1967◦ Corrected for usage of non-duty runways
Relative service times, si : derived from airport capacity manual prepared by Airborne Instruments Laboratory
Cost of delay to airplane owners and passengers, ci : Estimate of costs are based on American Airlines figures for airplanes similar to those at LaGuardia◦ Assumes $6 per hour for air carrier passenger time value
and $12 per hour for “more affluent” general aviation passenger time value
Parameter Data
Average remaining busy period, B(t) : American Airlines and United Airlines data used to relate delays experienced from individual flights◦ Used to determine hourly busy periods of the day
Determination of B(t) allows for marginal delay costs per minute of remaining busy period, Ci/B(t), to be calculated
Full marginal delay costs : Attained by multiplying the costs per minute of remaining busy period by the busy period estimates.◦ Result : Shows average values of the delay costs imposed
on other users by incremental operations at any time of the day
Parameter Data Continued…
Air Carriers have heavier traffic and longer service times Landings more expensive than takeoffs Air carriers have much greater marginal cost of delays Marginal cost of delay per minute of remaining busy period
shows the greater marginal cost of general aviation activity during peak periods
Empirical Estiamtes
Column 1 shows B(t)
Airport most congested between 1500-1600
Estimates suggests that one additional air carrier arrival between 1500-1600 would impose a delay cost of greater than $1000 on other users
Full Marginal Delay Cost Estimates
Flight fees at LaGuardia based on airplane weight◦ $5 minimum for each take off and no charge for
landing (general aviation usually minimum)◦ Air carriers pay fees between $50 and $150,
depending on weight Fee structure leads to two major inefficiencies
◦ Inefficiently large amount of general aviation traffic $5 dollar fees could cause marginal congestion costs
upwards of 200 times that amount Airline passenger loads are inefficiently low
◦ LaGuardia load factors averaged 59.4% in 1967
Current Policy
August 1, 1968: LaGuardia airport raised minimum fees to $25 for flights between 0800 and 1000 (Monday-Friday) and between 1500 and 2000 every day◦ Estimated that this measure reduced general aviation by
40% during such busy periods General aviation operations are of low value when
compared to relative congestion cost they impose on others
With present airfare, airlines can cover costs with low load factors◦ Incentive to schedule more flights to improve service◦ Less frequent service at higher load factors would be more
efficient
Current Policy Conclusions
Would be extremely difficult, if not impossible to find equilibrium prices
Would have to charge an increasing percentage of full marginal cost pricing until target was hit
Equilibrium marginal cost prices would result in very efficient runway use◦ Exclude low value general aviation traffic◦ Increase carrier load factors to a more efficient
level
Full Marginal Cost Pricing-Efficiency
Does not appear practical at LaGuardia in short run
Present fees determined by lease agreements between Port Authority and individual airlines◦ Airlines could shutdown fee increases
Long-run may yield benefits◦ Reduced operating costs with less traffic and lower
operating costs◦ May take long adjustment period to yield benefits
In reality, airline opposition would quickly dismiss the implementation of full marginal cost pricing
Full Marginal Cost Pricing-Practicality
Limit total airline runway use payments to align with present lease agreements
Change fees in such a way that fees are levied so that fees during any hour would be proportional to those that would prevail under full marginal cost pricing
Hypothetical estimate collections with full marginal cost flight fees used to compute proportional cost fees computed (tables 2/3)
Use percentages to allocate current level of runway prices proportionate to marginal cost pricing
Proportional Marginal Cost Pricing
Can observe much high runway fees during busy periods of the day
Costs much higher for general aviation, who generally pay minimum fees (shown in far right columns)
Proportional Marginal Cost Pricing Compared to Actual Minimum Fees
Limit low value general aviation traffic during busy hours◦ Fees as much as 5x higher during busy periods
Pricing scheme would “probably” eliminate almost as much general aviation traffic as full marginal cost prices
Little or no effect on inefficiently low load factors.
Proportional Marginal Cost Pricing-Efficiency
Airlines may pay more or less when compared to present fees
The more airline with lower costs, the more likely pricing scheme accepted
Local service carriers receive major cost increases
Costs Partially offset by less delay fees
Large airlines may be willing to subsidize local service carriers
Proportional Marginal Cost Pricing-Practicality
Restrict both general aviation and air carriers to lower levels of operation
Hard to design efficient administrative measure to determine respective levels of operation◦ No guarantee that schedules will go to highest
value user
Alternatives-Administrative Measures
Issue property rights in schedule slots for particular hours
A free market approach to allocating slots would allocate them to highest-value user
Feasible to implement to airlines All would share gains from efficiency In practice, a pricing scheme more likely
effective in controlling nonscheduled users
Alternatives-Combine with Schedule Slots
Policy consisting of both proportional marginal cost pricing and administrative limits◦ Proportional prices: exclude low value general
aviation users◦ Schedule limits: would increase airline load
factors Most benefits of full marginal cost pricing,
but more feasible to implement
Alternative-Combine Proportional Marginal Cost Pricing and Administrative Limits
Equilibrium marginal cost pricing does not appear to be a feasible alternative
Proportional marginal cost pricing offers similar efficiency advantages sans lowered load factors without many of the headaches of implementation
Combining proportional marginal cost pricing with administrative limits seems to be the most implementable measure that addresses both general aviation reduction during peak times and increases in load factors to more efficient levels
Conclusions
Questions?
The End