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Demand response to improved walking infrastructure: A study into the economics of walking and health behaviour change

Status of Publication: Published/Completed
Date produced: 2015
Commissioned/Funded by: British Heart Foundation;Medical Research Council;Department of Health (NI);Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Authoring organisation/Author affiliation: Institute for Global Food Security, Queen's University Belfast;School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences, Queen's University Belfast
Individual author(s): Longo A, Hutchinson WG, Hunter RF, Tully MA, Kee F
Type of Resource: Research
Impairment area(s): Mental health
Transport mode(s): Walking & Wheeling
Journey stage: Unspecified
Region: Northern Ireland

Document summary

Walking is the most common form of moderate-intensity physical activity among adults, is widely accessible and especially appealing to obese people. Most often policy makers are interested in valuing the effect on walking of changes in some characteristics of a neighbourhood, the demand response for walking, of infrastructure changes. A positive demand response to improvements in the walking environment could help meet the public health target of 150 min of at least moderate-intensity physical activity per week. We model walking in an individual’s local neighbourhood as a ‘weak complement’ to the characteristics of the neighbourhood itself. Walking is affected by neighbourhood characteristics, substitutes, and individual’s characteristics, including their opportunity cost of time. Using compensating variation, we assess the economic benefits of walking and how walking behaviour is affected by improvements to the neighbourhood. Using a sample of 1209 respondents surveyed over a 12 month period (Feb 2010-Jan 2011) in East Belfast, United Kingdom, we find that a policy that increased walkability and people’s perception of access to shops and facilities would lead to an increase in walking of about 36 min/person/week, valued at ?13.65/person/week. When focussing on inactive residents, a policy that improved the walkability of the area would lead to guidelines for physical activity being reached by only 12.8% of the population who are currently inactive. Additional interventions would therefore be needed to encourage inactive residents to achieve the recommended levels of physical activity, as it appears that interventions that improve the walkability of an area are particularly effective in increasing walking among already active citizens, and, among the inactive ones, the best response is found among healthier, younger and wealthier citizens.

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