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HOT or Not: Driver Elasticity to Price on the MnPASS HOT Lanes

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TLDR
In this paper, the MnPASS High Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes on two freeway corridors in Minnesota have been implemented and the results show that drivers use price as a signal of time savings.
Abstract
The Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) has added MnPASS High Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes on two freeway corridors. While not the first HOT lanes in the country, the MnPASS lanes are the first implementation of road pricing in Minnesota and possess a dynamic pricing schedule. Tolls charged to single occupancy vehicles (SOVs) are adjusted every three minutes according to HOT lane vehicle density. Given the infancy of systems like MnPASS, questions remain about drivers’ responses to toll prices. Three field experiments were conducted on the corridors during which prices were changed. Data from the field experiments as well as two years of toll and traffic data were analyzed to measure driver responses to pricing changes. Driver elasticity to price was positive with magnitudes less than 1.0. This positive relationship between price and demand is in contrast with the previously held belief that raising the price would discourage demand. We hypothesize this is because drivers use price as a signal of time savings. In addition, drivers consistently paid between approximately $60-120 per hour of travel time savings, much higher than the average value of time. Reasoning for these results is discussed as well as the implications these results have on the pricing of HOT lanes.

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HOT or not: Driver elasticity to price on the MnPASS HOT lanes

TL;DR: In this paper, the MnPASS High Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes on two freeway corridors in the Twin Cities were implemented and the authors measured drivers' responses to price changes.
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References
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