Abstract: This paper analyses the cost structure
of a sample of Italian local public transport (LPT) companies
operating in medium and large urban centres. The main focus is to
identify the proper network configuration for the LPT service, by
verifying the presence and the extent of scale and density
economies. Technological characteristics of public transit systems
are analysed by estimating both variable and total cost
function models, which consider three alternative supply-oriented
output measures, include firm-specific fixed effects, and allow
for X-inefficiency to play a role through the estimation of a
stochastic cost frontier. The evidence is remarkably robust
across the different specifications which have been tested and shows
the presence of short-run and long-run economies of scale, as well as
of economies of network density, for both the average sample firm and
for operators belonging to the highest percentile (large-sized
companies). This suggests that, from a technological point of view, a
proper LPT network design should at least include a large urban centre
and should be extended so as to embrace the intercity service too,
while a regulatory policy aimed at fragmenting the served area in
various sub-networks would imply an efficiency loss. |