4.6 Article

COVID-19 passenger transport measures and their impacts

Journal

TRANSPORT REVIEWS
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 441-466

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01441647.2021.1976307

Keywords

COVID19; Corona; passenger transport; policy; social impact

Categories

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development [10430032010001]

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This paper proposes a classification of COVID-19 measures aimed at passenger mobility and discusses the lack of comprehensive assessments on socially relevant effects of these measures in existing literature. The focus is mainly on direct effects, such as turnover of transport sector, with less attention given to indirect effects and health indicators related to COVID-19.
Governments all over the world have had to implement various policy measures in order to curb the spread of COVID-19, impacting many people's lives and livelihoods. Combinations of measures targeting the transportation sector and other aspects of social life have been implemented with varying degrees of success in different countries. This paper proposes a classification of COVID-19 measures aimed at passenger mobility. We distinguish the categories avoidance of travel, modal shift and improvement of quality. Per category, we distinguish different types of measures and effects (social, economic and environmental). Next, we review the literature on COVID-19 measures for passenger mobility, after which we discuss the policy relevance of our findings and propose a research agenda. We conclude that broad or integral assessments of measures on all socially relevant effects are rare. Also, few studies exist to determine the effects of individual measures and deal with combinations of measures instead. Studies on social or economic effects focus on partial direct effects (e.g. turnover of the transport sector, effect of mobility measures on commuter traffic) and do not elaborate on indirect effects (e.g. changes in household expenditure, stress levels). Finally, there is a greater focus in the literature on intermediary health indicators (e.g. travel behaviour) but less on the actual spread of COVID-19 or indeed on other indirect health effects of measures (e.g. due to air pollution, more exercise, etc).

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