published journal article

What drives variations in public health and social services expenditures? the association between political fragmentation and local expenditure patterns

The European Journal of Health Economics

Publication Date

July 1, 2022

Author(s)

Yonsu Kim, Jae Hong Kim

Abstract

The US spends two times more than the OECD average in health expenditure but has a much smaller portion of public health spending to total health expenditure than other OECD countries. While it has been suggested that public health and social services spending is crucial to promoting health outcomes, less is known about what drives variations in public health expenditure across regions. This study aims to examine whether political fragmentation in local governance is associated with variations in public health and social services expenditures. Using the US Census of Governments, we constructed a panel dataset of political fragmentation and local government spending patterns (1997–2012) for 792 US counties (population > 60,882, top 25%) and employed Least Squares Dummy Variable (LSDV) and Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE) models. We found that per capita public health spending tended to be smaller in areas where the degree of political fragmentation was higher (Coef:  – 0.034; p < 0.01), particularly when general-purpose governments were more fragmented (Coef:  – 0.087; p < 0.001). The proportion of public health spending also decreased when local governments were more fragmented (Coef:  – 0.012; p < 0.001). Social services expenditures and their proportions to total government expenditure fell with an increase in the degree of political fragmentation. Our findings suggest that fragmented governance settings, in which localities are more likely to face competition with others, may lead to a reduction in public spending essential for population health and that political fragmentation can also have a deterrent effect on broader categories of health-related social services spending.

Suggested Citation
Yonsu Kim and Jae Hong Kim (2022) “What drives variations in public health and social services expenditures? the association between political fragmentation and local expenditure patterns”, The European Journal of Health Economics, 23(5), pp. 781–789. Available at: 10.1007/s10198-021-01394-x.

published journal article

Does e-shopping impact household travel? Evidence from the 2017 U.S. NHTS

Journal of Transport Geography

Publication Date

February 1, 2024

Abstract

How does e-shopping impact household travel? To answer this question, which is particularly relevant for policymakers concerned with congestion, air pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions from transportation, we analyzed data from the 2017 National Household Travel Survey using propensity score matching. This allowed us to tackle the bias from households self-selecting into various levels of e-shopping and gain causal inference. Unlike other related papers in the literature, our unit of analysis is a household because travel and shopping decisions within a household are interrelated. We classified households into three groups based on how many orders per person per month they placed online: low (up to one), medium (more than once but less than four), and high (over four). We found that more e-shopping results in more household travel (number of trips, miles, and VMT), but this effect depends on e-shopping frequency and population density, and it affects weekdays more than weekends. E-shopping impacts household travel more for medium frequency e-shoppers in low density areas: compared to similar low frequency e-shoppers, on weekdays, they take on average 8 more monthly trips and travel ∼104 extra miles (including 31 miles for shopping). At the other end of the spectrum, high frequency e-shoppers in dense areas do not travel more on weekends than similar low e-shopping frequency households. To help reduce e-shopping induced travel, policymakers could encourage the creation of neighborhood depots where households would pick-up and return unwanted orders, and foster the development of virtual reality tools for shopping from home.

Suggested Citation
Lu Xu and Jean-Daniel Saphores (2024) “Does <i>e</i>-shopping impact household travel? Evidence from the 2017 U.S. NHTS”, Journal of Transport Geography, 115, p. 103827. Available at: 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2024.103827.

conference paper

The impact of a new mass rapid transit system on residential property values - the case of kaohsiung, taiwan

Transportation & logistics management

Publication Date

January 1, 2012

Abstract

The construction of a public transit system in a large metropolitan area can relieve congestion, enhance mobility, and improve air quality. In a well-functioning housing market, these benefits are reflected in housing prices. In this paper, we analyze transactions for 2007 and 2009 of apartments with elevators from Kaohsiung (Taiwan’s second largest city) using a geographically weighted regression hedonic model to capture the impact of the opening in 2008 of a new mass rapid transit (MRT) system. We find that the opening of the MRT had a statistically significant and positive impact on the value of apartments with elevators that was not yet fully capitalized in 2007 prices.

Suggested Citation
Jean-Daniel Saphores and Chung-Cheng Yeh (2012) “The impact of a new mass rapid transit system on residential property values - the case of kaohsiung, taiwan”, in . Mak, HY and Lo, HK (ed.) Transportation & logistics management. HONG KONG SOC TRANSPORTATION STUDIES LTD, pp. 89–96.

published journal article

A new approach to estimate vehicle emissions using inductive loop detector data

Journal of Intelligent Transportation Systems

Suggested Citation
Shin-Ting (Cindy) Jeng, K.S. Nesamani and Stephen G. Ritchie (2012) “A new approach to estimate vehicle emissions using inductive loop detector data”, Journal of Intelligent Transportation Systems, 17(3), pp. 179–190. Available at: 10.1080/15472450.2012.712495.

published journal article

Cities and economic development: Does the city limits story still apply?

Economic Development Quarterly

Publication Date

November 1, 2001

Author(s)

Victoria Basolo, Chihyen Huang
Suggested Citation
Victoria Basolo and Chihyen Huang (2001) “Cities and economic development: Does the city limits story still apply?”, Economic Development Quarterly, 15(4), pp. 327–339. Available at: 10.1177/089124240101500407.

conference paper

Pavement rehabilitation analysis and design mentor

Proceedings of the VTT symposium (valtion teknillinen tutkimuskeskus)

Publication Date

January 1, 1990
Suggested Citation
Stephen G. Ritchie, Manuan Kim and Neil A. Prosser (1990) “Pavement rehabilitation analysis and design mentor”, in Proceedings of the VTT symposium (valtion teknillinen tutkimuskeskus), pp. 353–381.

conference paper

Lane Management Strategies in A Connected Environment: Analysis of Freight Corridor Scenarios for I-170 in Southern California

102nd Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board, Washington, D.C.

Publication Date

January 1, 2023
Suggested Citation
Monica Ramirez-Ibarra and Jean-Daniel Saphores (2023) “Lane Management Strategies in A Connected Environment: Analysis of Freight Corridor Scenarios for I-170 in Southern California”, in 102nd Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board, Washington, D.C..

published journal article

The price effects of international airline alliances

The Journal of Law and Economics

Publication Date

October 1, 2000

Author(s)

Jan Brueckner, W. Tom Whalen

Abstract

Abstract This paper provides evidence on the effect of international airline alliances on fares. The main finding is that alliance partners charge interline fares that are approximately 25 percent below those charged by nonallied carriers. According to our theoretical model, the main source of this fare reduction is the internalization of a negative externality that arises from the uncoordinated choice of interline “sub-fares” in the absence of an alliance. The paper also looks for evidence of an anti-competitive alliance effect in the gateway-to-gateway markets. While the point estimates show that an alliance between two previously competitive carriers would raise fares by about 5 percent, this effect is not statistically significant.

Suggested Citation
Jan K. Brueckner and W. Tom Whalen (2000) “The price effects of international airline alliances”, The Journal of Law and Economics, 43(2), pp. 503–546. Available at: 10.1086/467464.

Preprint Journal Article

Too Afraid to Drive: Systematic Discovery of Semantic DoS Vulnerability in Autonomous Driving Planning under Physical-World Attacks

Publication Date

January 12, 2022

Author(s)

Ziwen Wan, Junjie Shen, Jalen Chuang, Xin Xia, Joshua Garcia, Jiaqi Ma, Qi Alfred Chen

Abstract

In high-level Autonomous Driving (AD) systems, behavioral planning is in charge of making high-level driving decisions such as cruising and stopping, and thus highly securitycritical. In this work, we perform the first systematic study of semantic security vulnerabilities specific to overly-conservative AD behavioral planning behaviors, i.e., those that can cause failed or significantly-degraded mission performance, which can be critical for AD services such as robo-taxi/delivery. We call them semantic Denial-of-Service (DoS) vulnerabilities, which we envision to be most generally exposed in practical AD systems due to the tendency for conservativeness to avoid safety incidents. To achieve high practicality and realism, we assume that the attacker can only introduce seemingly-benign external physical objects to the driving environment, e.g., off-road dumped cardboard boxes. To systematically discover such vulnerabilities, we design PlanFuzz, a novel dynamic testing approach that addresses various problem-specific design challenges. Specifically, we propose and identify planning invariants as novel testing oracles, and design new input generation to systematically enforce problemspecific constraints for attacker-introduced physical objects. We also design a novel behavioral planning vulnerability distance metric to effectively guide the discovery. We evaluate PlanFuzz on 3 planning implementations from practical open-source AD systems, and find that it can effectively discover 9 previouslyunknown semantic DoS vulnerabilities without false positives. We find all our new designs necessary, as without each design, statistically significant performance drops are generally observed. We further perform exploitation case studies using simulation and real-vehicle traces. We discuss root causes and potential fixes.

Suggested Citation
Ziwen Wan, Junjie Shen, Jalen Chuang, Xin Xia, Joshua Garcia, Jiaqi Ma and Qi Alfred Chen (2022) “Too Afraid to Drive: Systematic Discovery of Semantic DoS Vulnerability in Autonomous Driving Planning under Physical-World Attacks”. arXiv. Available at: 10.48550/arXiv.2201.04610.