Is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? An empirical study in Davao City, Philippines

The presence of unique kinds of public transportation often described as informal characterizes many cities in developing countries. As often noted, people in the lower income categories are usually the ones who rely on informal public transport services. In the Philippines, one can observed that an...

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Main Authors: Guillen, Marie Danielle, Ishida, Haruo, Okamoto, Naohisa
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2013
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/25
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0967070X12000546
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.asog-pubs-10182022-04-04T05:57:56Z Is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? An empirical study in Davao City, Philippines Guillen, Marie Danielle Ishida, Haruo Okamoto, Naohisa The presence of unique kinds of public transportation often described as informal characterizes many cities in developing countries. As often noted, people in the lower income categories are usually the ones who rely on informal public transport services. In the Philippines, one can observed that an average Filipino uses door-to-door transport services regularly. This starts from stepping out of the house, walking several paces (if at all), hailing a “pedicab” (bicycle with a side-cab) or tricycle (motorcycle with side-cab), to riding a public utility jeepney (PUJs) or bus, getting-off, hopping on to another “pedicab or “tricycle”, and getting transported right to the door of final destination. Using Davao City, Philippines as the case study area, the paper tries to explore the concept of habit and dependency on the different road-based public transport modes based on both theories of rational behavior and planned behavior. Empirical results using structural analysis show the strong public transport dependency to PUJs and tricycles where half of the household population have vehicles. It confirms the role of rational behavior where socio-economic factors affect modal decision. Likewise, the study also shows interesting findings wherein the quality of service evaluation played a direct role in the perceived dependency to formal modes (buses, taxis) and informal mode (such as motorcycle taxis or MC taxis) but an indirect role in the actual use of the mode. The study shows the relationship of perceived reliance vis-à-vis trip recall using indigenous modes (PUJs, tricycles) and supports the theory that suggests the role of habits and “mere exposure” effect. As noted in many related studies, it is not easy to alter habits. This indicator is validated by the actual use of public transport modes especially tricycles and MC taxis for short-distance trips as well as how one views own dependency vis-à-vis how the same individual sees his/her household and community dependency to a certain public transport mode. These findings suggest the need to understand Filipino commuter's psychology and a careful review and understanding of the concept of sustainability, infrastructure needs, seamless multi-modal connections and over-all quality of service given limited economic support in a context of an emerging city in a developing country. 2013-03-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/25 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0967070X12000546 Ateneo School of Government Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Public transport dependency: Habit Modes Informal transport Transportation
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Public transport dependency: Habit
Modes
Informal transport
Transportation
spellingShingle Public transport dependency: Habit
Modes
Informal transport
Transportation
Guillen, Marie Danielle
Ishida, Haruo
Okamoto, Naohisa
Is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? An empirical study in Davao City, Philippines
description The presence of unique kinds of public transportation often described as informal characterizes many cities in developing countries. As often noted, people in the lower income categories are usually the ones who rely on informal public transport services. In the Philippines, one can observed that an average Filipino uses door-to-door transport services regularly. This starts from stepping out of the house, walking several paces (if at all), hailing a “pedicab” (bicycle with a side-cab) or tricycle (motorcycle with side-cab), to riding a public utility jeepney (PUJs) or bus, getting-off, hopping on to another “pedicab or “tricycle”, and getting transported right to the door of final destination. Using Davao City, Philippines as the case study area, the paper tries to explore the concept of habit and dependency on the different road-based public transport modes based on both theories of rational behavior and planned behavior. Empirical results using structural analysis show the strong public transport dependency to PUJs and tricycles where half of the household population have vehicles. It confirms the role of rational behavior where socio-economic factors affect modal decision. Likewise, the study also shows interesting findings wherein the quality of service evaluation played a direct role in the perceived dependency to formal modes (buses, taxis) and informal mode (such as motorcycle taxis or MC taxis) but an indirect role in the actual use of the mode. The study shows the relationship of perceived reliance vis-à-vis trip recall using indigenous modes (PUJs, tricycles) and supports the theory that suggests the role of habits and “mere exposure” effect. As noted in many related studies, it is not easy to alter habits. This indicator is validated by the actual use of public transport modes especially tricycles and MC taxis for short-distance trips as well as how one views own dependency vis-à-vis how the same individual sees his/her household and community dependency to a certain public transport mode. These findings suggest the need to understand Filipino commuter's psychology and a careful review and understanding of the concept of sustainability, infrastructure needs, seamless multi-modal connections and over-all quality of service given limited economic support in a context of an emerging city in a developing country.
format text
author Guillen, Marie Danielle
Ishida, Haruo
Okamoto, Naohisa
author_facet Guillen, Marie Danielle
Ishida, Haruo
Okamoto, Naohisa
author_sort Guillen, Marie Danielle
title Is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? An empirical study in Davao City, Philippines
title_short Is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? An empirical study in Davao City, Philippines
title_full Is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? An empirical study in Davao City, Philippines
title_fullStr Is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? An empirical study in Davao City, Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? An empirical study in Davao City, Philippines
title_sort is the use of informal public transport modes in developing countries habitual? an empirical study in davao city, philippines
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2013
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/25
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0967070X12000546
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