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Recent Submissions

Now showing 1 - 5 of 7
  • Publication
    European Transport / Trasporti Europei (2000) 14/VI
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2000)
      665  933
  • Publication
    Deregulating the economy: centralized vs. market - like systems. The principal-agent perspective applied to the transport sector
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2000)
    Mazzarino, Marco
    In the paper, the existence of coordination mechanisms capable of achieving Pareto efficiency under uncertainty conditions (information asymmetry) is investigated. Referring to the deregu¬lation processes under way within the transport system, coordination mechanisms are modelled as principal-agent relationships, public sector being the principal and private operators being agents. It is shown that optimum incentive-compatible mechani¬sms (Nash equilibria) in a deregulated system leads to an inefficient allocation of resources unless agents are risk-neutral. It is also shown that using information as a strategic resource there is some room for efficiency improvement by monitoring agents and by repeating the agency relationship over time.
      1220  829
  • Publication
    Shifting densities
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2000)
    Mille, Matthieu
    In this paper, the author adopt a time-geography approach to examine the temporal variation of urban density by analysing spatial load changes at different times of the day at the communal and community level. The evolution of means of transport coupled with the abandon of the notion of direct proximity to the urban dwelling place provide the basis for this new approach to the study of urban densities. The shift towards spatial specialisation within cities has lead to radical changes in the forms of urban mobility. In just a few generations, cities, formerly highly concentrated centres of population, have evolved into diffuse urban expanses. As a result, the intangible bonds between the dwelling place and the city have progressively disappeared giving way to a temporally-biased perception of urban space determined by existing methods of transport. Density variations have thus been used to measure urban mobility and transport requirements.
      958  829
  • Publication
    Electronic commerce techniques for process change in an integrated supply chain
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2000)
    Čišić, D.
    ;
    Komadina, P.
    ;
    Baričević, H.
    Use of an economic metaphor for a usage of the computer aided logistic organization leads to motivating self-interested parties to achieve mutual satisfactory and efficient outcomes. Efficiency, in this sense, is maximized when redistributing the trade surplus leaves everyone at least as well as before. Simulation of economic aspects of transport logistic chain is currently under the way at Rijeka College of Maritime Studies. The system consisted of 24 different types of organizations and 103 different documents interchanged in the supply chain. The primary aspects were transaction costs and vertical integra¬tion using electronic aided logistics and electronic documents. The paper introduces results of the research showing savings up to 1,2 % of GDP for any country. The savings have been calculated for each organisation type, showing it's structural position in the supply chain.
      1116  654
  • Publication
    Congestion and Peak load pricing: a comparison in electricity and transportation
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2000)
    Marcucci, Edoardo
    ;
    Polidori, Paolo
    Abstract: Prices signal the scarcity of resources on the market and produce their efficient allocation. Given the level of high fixed costs characterising most public Utilities (electricity and transport are no exemption to this) there is a strong case for a discriminating use of prices. The demand for public utility service varies periodically and its management constitute the core of the peak load pricing problem. A fundamental aspect of peak load theory is the specific object of pricing. We assume that peak load implies pricing far the use of scarce resource capacity in production, whereas peak load far the use of a network, that is congestion charging, is aimed at the internalisation of external costs. In the case of transport we might adopt, far example, peak load pricing far the management of excessive bus demand and use congestion charging to internalise the external costs imposed by private transportation. In the electricity sector peak load pri¬cing might be used to manage the excessive power demand while congestion pricing is just a part of the transmission pricing mechanism that has to be complemented by electricity losses charging. In the case of transport the two problems overlap since production and transmission coincide.
      2145  1124