Working Paper

The Political Economy of Pricing Car Access to Downtown Commercial Districts

Bruno De Borger, Antonio Russo
CESifo, Munich, 2015

CESifo Working Paper No. 5294

We study the political economy of pricing access to downtown commercial districts, using parking fees as the main example. A spatial equilibrium model is embedded in a political economy framework in which special interest groups (urban and suburban retailers, local residents) lobby the city government. We have the following results. If downtown and suburban stores sell a homogeneous good, the local government underprices downtown parking if suburban stores sell at small enough margins compared to traditional downtown retailers. If goods are heterogeneous and some consumers engage in multiple-stop shopping (i.e., shop both downtown and in the suburbs), suburban stores will not lobby at all; lobbying by downtown retailers leads to parking fees below the social optimum. Furthermore, local residents do not necessarily lobby for high parking fees on downtown shoppers. If a decline in urban stores leads to negative externalities (urban blight) they may join forces with downtown retailers and lobby against high parking fees on shoppers.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Industrial Organisation
Keywords: parking fees, lobbying, retailers, multiple-stop shopping
JEL Classification: D430, D720, H230, R410