Ken Acks Presents Paper on “A Dynamic Analysis of the Costs and Benefits of a Smart Growth/Sprawl Reduction Program in 1988, 2008 and 2013" at the 2014 Annual Conference of the Society for Benefit-Cost Analysis
The presentation
was at the Location Based Analysis Panel of the Conference entitle:
Benefit-Cost Analysis for Evidence-Based Decision Making which was held at the
The Marvin Center at the George Washington University; 800 21st St. NW,
Washington, D.C. 20052 from March 13th through March 14th, 2014.
More information
about the conference including the agenda is available at https://benefitcostanalysis.org/events/2014-conference/agenda.
The abstract
follows:
Sprawl can produce
the following costs:
1)
increased travel costs and time lost in travel;
2)
increased tax burdens arising from road, utility and school construction and
maintenance costs;
3)
increased health care costs due to pollution and increased obesity from
automobile-centered neighborhood designs and possibly stress from commuting;
4) Loss
of productive agricultural and forestry land
5)
Reduced availability of natural lands that support recreation, tourism and
wildlife related activities
6)
Endanger species
7)
Decrease the economic vitality of urban centers;
However,
most of the world's large cities are growing outward and it appears as if
"sprawl" is preferred by many as a lifestyle. Most Americans have
chosen to live in single detached homes and commute to work by automobile.
Supporters of sprawl also argue that actual commuting times may be shorter due
to sprawl, and sprawl separates residences from noxious uses, facilitates
reduced prices for consumer goods by easing the development of Walmarts and
other discounters, and enhances consumer choice by promoting competition
between localities..
The
critics of sprawl retort by pointing to distorted prices, such as automobile
subsidies and mortgage interest deductions, and claimed but unregistered costs
of sprawl.
Many,
notably Leigh Gallagher in The End of the Suburbs: Where the American Dream is
Moving have pointed to recent shifts towards cities that accelerated during the
financial crisis.
This
paper will analyze the costs and benefits of a program to support higher
density walkable mixed-use development and discourage lower densities in 1988,
in 2008 (before the Great Recession affected this area significantly) and in
2013 in New York’s Hudson Valley. The paper will estimate the benefits of the
program at three points in time and evaluate changes over time arising from
increased density, preference shifts, new information,and other factors.
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