Credit-Based Congestion Pricing: Equilibrium Properties and Optimal Scheme Design
Devansh Jalota, Jessica Lazarus, Alexandre Bayen, Marco, Pavone

TL;DR
This paper models credit-based congestion pricing (CBCP) to improve traffic flow and equity, analyzing equilibrium properties and designing optimal schemes to benefit society, especially low-income travelers, through a game-theoretic and optimization approach.
Contribution
It introduces a new non-atomic congestion game model for CBCP, characterizes equilibrium properties, and develops a bi-level optimization framework for optimal scheme design.
Findings
CBCP can improve traffic flow and social equity.
Optimal CBCP schemes can be computed via convex programming.
Numerical case study shows benefits for low-income travelers.
Abstract
Credit-based congestion pricing (CBCP) has emerged as a mechanism to alleviate the social inequity concerns of road congestion pricing - a promising strategy for traffic congestion mitigation - by providing low-income users with travel credits to offset some of their toll payments. While CBCP offers immense potential for addressing inequity issues that hamper the practical viability of congestion pricing, the deployment of CBCP in practice is nascent, and the potential efficacy and optimal design of CBCP schemes have yet to be formalized. In this work, we study the design of CBCP schemes to achieve particular societal objectives and investigate their influence on traffic patterns when routing heterogeneous users with different values of time (VoTs) in a multi-lane highway with an express lane. We introduce a new non-atomic congestion game model of a mixed-economy, wherein eligible users…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsTransportation Planning and Optimization · Traffic control and management · Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth
