One of the most interesting transportation programs around these days is TravelSmart. It’s not interesting because of what it does but simply because it works. You see, in theory, TravelSmart should be a dismal failure. That it performs minor miracles is proof of the flaws of economic theory. And understanding those flaws sheds light on a fascinating paradox of car-less living. It also hints at a massive opportunity to help northwesterners better meet their desires, by driving less.
But I’m getting ahead of myself. The story begins with a battery charger.
This summer of my family’s car-less year, friends have sometimes loaned us their cars while they have been on vacation. It’s been interesting to observe how our behavior has changed during the loaner-car weeks. When there’s a car parked out front, we drive more. We don’t drive as much as when we were owners, because we’ve learned better options for some trips and because we don’t like to be responsible for friends’ cars. But for some trips that we’d otherwise skip, we climb in and go.
An example: two weeks ago, my family was at a friend’s fiftieth birthday picnic. My wife Amy had arrived in a loaner car, which was parked nearby. During the party, she and I were taking photos of the guests, at the birthday host’s prompting. Unfortunately, our camera ran out of juice and I had left the charger at home, three miles away. I drove the loaner home and got it.
Now, if we hadn’t had a car there, I never would have gone. I would have been more resourceful. I would have asked around for a camera. That’s what I should have done. By the time I returned, another guest had fired up her Nikon and taken over our shutterbug duties. If I’d given the situation a bit more thought, I could have avoided a trip. It wasn’t a big deal—maybe 40 minutes round trip. But for mortal beings like us, time is a nonrenewable resource. And such trips are, in my experience, quite common when there’s a car at the ready. The minutes add up.
What the loaner cars have reminded us of is that when there are car keys in our pockets, our default decision is to drive. It’s not that we do a quick weighting of options and probabilities and choose driving as the best alternative. It’s that we choose not to do such a weighting. We avoid thinking that hard. It’s as if the mere presence of car keys turns down the problem-solving center in our brains.
I don’t want to overstate the car/no-car difference. It’s a matter of degrees. Loaner cars increase the number of our car trips by two or three a week. What’s notable about these added trips is that they’re rarely essential. With or without a loaner, the kids go to practice and friends’ houses; we do our errands; we go to work. It’s nonessential trips, like picking up the charger, that we add when a car is on hand.
Let me formalize this mundane observation into an axiom, call it The First Law of Cars: When you have a car, you drive it.
(I know: brilliant.)
I don’t just mean that in a definitional sense. I mean that when you have a car at your disposal, driving it is your reflexive response to most mobility needs. And I mean this in a specific, cognitive sense. I mean that when a need that involves distance or travel comes up, you immediately think of driving the car and your brain avoids thinking about alternatives.
This may sound like a stretch. Surely, it’s a matter of convenience, not cognition. Surely, it’s an intuitive economic calculation: a weighing of costs.
What if it’s not? What if northwesterners, like the residents of other automobilized places, are actually not making rational, economic choices to drive? What if, at least some of the times that we turn the keys, we’re making irrational choices? What if our minds, repulsed by the complexity of considering alternatives to the simple path of driving, are actually making decisions that don’t best reflect our wants and needs? What if some share—say one tenth—of the trips we drive are actually a waste of our lives that, if something could compel us to carefully consider the alternatives, we would voluntary choose to skip or do by some other means. And what if being carless served to compel such rational choices? Well, that would mean that, at least where some share of trips is concerned, having a car actually diminishes our ability to make good decisions. And being car-less actually improves the congruence between our enduring preferences and our actions.
What started me thinking about all this was the battery charger, and what clinched it was this fascinating article on “behavioral economics” by Craig Lambert. Behavioral economics is the science of what people actually do when confronted with trade-offs (aka, economic choices). Both in controlled tests and in the real world, people break the laws of neo-liberal economic theory. They are predictably irrational in several ways. For example, they—we—don’t treat gains and losses equally. Losing a $20 bill is a much bigger deal to us than finding one. (This asymmetry of losses and gains has enormous implications for both politics and sustainability. For example, it explains something about why “takings” are a political issue while “givings” are not.)
The particular irrationality that’s in play where driving is concerned, I believe, has to do with decision avoidance. People intend to make good, informed decisions about important matters—like retirement savings and mortgages and insurance—but they really dislike complexity. So they procrastinate and go along with the default option.
Take the example of investing for retirement. Even though enrolling promptly in 401k retirement saving plans can yield employees tens of thousands of dollars, a very large share of workers postpone action for years. Even when they’re required to attend staff briefings on these plans, they still sign up in a trickle, not a drove. As behavioral economist David Laibson told the author Lambert, “People find these kinds of financial transactions unpleasant and confusing, and they are happier with the idea of doing it tomorrow.”
Thus, people avoid making a decision. They stick with no retirement savings. Or they leave unexamined their insurance plan or telephone company or bank. They leave alone what’s “not broken,” despite sometimes enormous opportunities to gain financially from changing. As Laibson says, “People want to be prudent, they just don’t want to do it right now.”
To me, many transport choices seem analogous. We northwesterners want to walk more, get on our bikes, carpool, and try transit and car sharing. We dislike driving as much as we do, though we occasionally enjoy it. We just postpone the quest for alternatives. Alternatives require reflection and sometimes-complicated planning, and our minds shy away from such things. We also shy away from the exercise involved in not driving: breaking a sweat is something that most of us are quite eager to do, uh, tomorrow. Most of the time, therefore, we go with the default: When you have a car, you drive it.
The First Law’s corollary—call it the First Law of Car-lessness—is actually more interesting than the law itself: When you don’t have a car, you are forced to consider your options for each trip. You have to think more. And that is often a good thing, because often there are better alternatives than driving. Just as few people regret having acted promptly to save for retirement, few people regret finding a better alternative
to time behind the wheel.
Which brings us, finally, to TravelSmart—remember TravelSmart? TravelSmart is a modest remedy for default driving invented by German researcher Werner Brog, and implemented worldwide by his company Socialdata.
TravelSmart is a personalized marketing program for not driving. Typically funded by a local transit or transportation department, TravelSmart does a detailed baseline transportation survey of residents in a neighborhood. Those residents who express interest in making greater use of transit, bicycles, or shoe leather—often one third of all residents—receive additional information, customized to their needs. For example, if you said you wouldn’t mind knowing more about your transit options, TravelSmart might hand-deliver a single, integrated schedule that covers all buses leaving from all stops within easy walking distance of your home. Later, you might receive a personal visit from a transit agency representative. If you’re curious about walking more, you might receive a local walking map on your doorstep, followed by a visit from a TravelSmart employee who is knowledgeable about local topography, shops, and foot paths.
That’s about all TravelSmart does—oh, except that it also does a detailed post-survey. What’s so surprising is that people who receive TravelSmart’s customized information typically reduce their car travel by 10 percent. In the transportation world, that’s a big shift—comparable to what happens when a major new rail line goes into your neighborhood, for example. Or comparable to the immediate change in behavior you’d expect from a doubling of gasoline prices.
Is it a fluke? No. That proportion, or something close to it, has proved itself consistent in ten cities worldwide, including walking cities such as Paris, France and auto-oriented ones such as Perth, Australia. And it’s proved up in Cascadian cities including Bellingham and Portland (phase 1 in 2003 here; more recent examples here). (Greater Vancouver, BC, is doing a TravelSmart pilot in six neighborhoods this year. In Washington, TravelSmart-like programs are underway in my own neighborhood of Ballard and in downtown Bellevue.)
These results make TravelSmart a fascinating anomaly in conventional economic theory, which presumes that people are good calculators of their own self interest. The fact that an intervention as simple as TravelSmart can induce a 10 percent drop in driving puts the lie to that notion—unless there’s an information problem at work. In economy theory, absence of information can cloud consumers’ decisionmaking and the cost of gathering missing information can be high enough to make it rational not to bother. For the latter case to hold, however, information about nondriving must be hard to get or the cost of driving must be very low. Obviously, the cost of driving is very high. And information about walking or riding buses is quite easy to get in most cities.
TravelSmart works, I believe, because it’s a mild antidote to default driving. It converts nondriving from an abstract and complicated option—the kind of alternative that we intend to consider but find easier to ignore until some indefinite future date—to a straight-forward choice that we can quickly and intuitively weigh against driving. When a local expert has talked us through the basics about local stations and stops, transit ceases to seem as complicated and confusing. Then, when a mobility need comes up, our minds don’t simply shut off and point us toward the car. TravelSmart lets us consider options.
A few weeks ago, Seattle Times columnist Danny Westneat asked what it would take for Americans to trim their oil consumption by 3 percent, to adapt to the temporary loss of oil from Prudhoe Bay. (In the same piece, he teasingly called me a “carless freak.”) Well, if TravelSmart is any guide, many Americans would likely choose to use around 10 percent less fuel—if they could be induced to consider their options more of the time.
There are two implications of this line of reasoning that warrant a quick mention, in closing.
1. At a personal level, car-lessness is the ultimate TravelSmart. It eliminates the driving default—as loaner cars have reminded my family this summer—forcing us to actually choose the best uses of our time and money each time we’re inclined to head out the door. In this sense, car-lessness is less a sacrifice than a means of aligning our actions with our lasting intentions. It’s in the same category of self-coercion as enrolling in a weight reduction program or putting the alarm clock out of arm’s reach. It’s a way to make ourselves knuckle under and do some things, like exercise more, that we have a hard time staying disciplined about.
2. At a policy level, countering the inertial power of the driving default is a legitimate, even an important public goal. The driving default is a market failure, and one with enormous implications not only for individuals’ ability to achieve what they want out of life but also for strong communities, fair markets, and responsible stewardship. TravelSmart has proven itself one effective means of countering the default. Car-lessness is another. Recruiting a growing share of vehicle owners to car-lessness would have far-larger than proportional impacts on consumption of fuel and road space. Perhaps a piece of Cascadia’s response to climate change should be to offer bounties on gas guzzlers, and pay the bounties in credits at car-sharing programs such as FlexCar.
When you don’t own a car, you still can choose to drive. My family makes that choice several times a week (even when we don’t have a loaner). But it’s no longer a quasi-automatic decision—an unthinking default. When we drive these days, it’s because we thought about it first.
bottleman
Alan, you mentioned car sharing (such as FlexCar) in there, but I think it could be a bigger part of the solution. The logic of carsharing COMPLETELY smashes that “default” mode of driving you speak of.First let’s recognize that in the Northwest, everybody needs a car at least once in a while to live a high quality of life. How else do you, say, get to the mountains?So the usual choice is owning or not owning a car. A lot of otherwise environmentally aware people get cars of their own and then fall into that default mode you spoke of. Information-based “choose to not drive” campaigns are focused at those kind of people, but IMHO they can get a little ridiculous, because those people aren’t quite as dumb as they seem. They know that they’re making hundreds of dollars in car and insurance payments every month, and regardless of gas prices, or ideals, that won’t change if they switch to transit or biking. Following their ideals gives them no tangible reward. They might as well use what they’re paying so much for.The loaner car is kind of a fantasy setup, because the loanee gets the convenience of a personal car without having to make those monthly payments. The loanee relies on an environmental “externality”!Now compare to car sharing. With cars distributed around the city in areas hopefully near you, it’s got convenience similar to a loaner car. But the logic of carsharing COMPLETELY smashes that “default” mode of driving you speak of when there is a car available. It makes the choice a logical and financial one.When car sharing is your car, you know that an impulse trip to the store is going to cost you—in my case an 1-hour trip is something like $8-$10 (gas and insurance are included in the fees). That’s the kind of thing you immediately stop doing. On the other hand that $8-$10 is well worth it, if, say, you’re picking up a piece of furniture that would otherwise cost $100 to get delivered. So there’s no need to add dogma about environmental correctness … the choice gets made by the traveller on the basis of their needs. Environmental good is lined up with financial good.From my experience car sharing can work incredibly well if you live in a situation where a car is not necessary for everyday needs—getting to work, everyday shopping, etc. Then when the need for a car—an important appointment, a trip out of town, the song of the road, whatever—comes up, it’s available to you and you know exactly what the cost is.Driving becomes a true choice and not just a devil’s bargain.I’ve also found something really interesting. When you’re using a car intermittently, you can really enjoy driving. You see what is special and good about it (crusing on US 101 through southern oregon, say), without getting into a nasty old commuter funk.bottleworld.net
Alan Durning
I couldn’t agree more, Bottleman. I’m just surprised you’d characterize me as inadequately pro-car-sharing. Heck, I think I mention it in almost every single car-less post I’ve written. I promote it so often that I worry people are starting to wonder if FlexCar is paying for product placements 😉 (They’re not. I swear.)
bottleman
Oops, apologies, didn’t read the rest of the series. I just discovered this site last week or so. Anyway, I think what I was trying to say (without being discouraging) was that information-based approaches (it sounds like TravelSmart is one) don’t really change the logic of transportation for most people. It sounds like TravelSmart provides all the options in a way that makes it as easy as possible to give not driving a shot.But once you’ve made that investment in a car (with all those fixed costs) the incentives to not use it are all pretty theoretical.. the environment, fitness, etc. Yes, such info will sway some people, but my guess is it won’t be a lot. I recall someone quoting me some study that “carrots” to try alternative transport, carpooling, etc. often only change 2 or 3% of the people targeted, where as “sticks” (punishments) have a greater potential, but are obviously much more politically unpopular.The thing I love about the car sharing idea is it combines the carrots and the sticks beautifully. Your self interest in saving money helps you do nice things for your body and the planet. Good luck with your year.bottleworld.net
Alan Durning
Bottleman,We are in complete accord. Perhaps I’ll do a whole post specifically on car sharing. I’ll add that to the growing list of future posts.
Finish
Alan-I would be particularly interested in your analysis of the different types of car-sharing. Flexcar’s “by the hour including gas” payment plan is very different, philosophically, from the co-op model of a big deposit, a small hourly charge and a per-mile charge.
Alan Durning
That’s an interesting question, Finish.Maybe you could shed some light on the question sooner than I. I’ve not yet pondered that question. Obviously, though, the more incremental (as opposed to fixed) the pricing, the better a job of overcoming the default.
Steve Mooney
Decision avoidance is a fascinating idea. There’s a parallel here in the eternal trains-vs-buses transit argument: fewer faster train lines may move people less efficiently than a more comprehensive bus system would, but the train system may still attract more riders because it requires less decision making.
Alan Durning
Steve,That strikes me as a plausible argument. It’s also, in principle, testable.
Rich
I’ve followed your car-less post closely as my family is preparing to do the same. I only wonder why you choose to write car-less instead of carfree?
Alan Durning
Rich,Please share your experiences once you’re car-free!Car-less, car-free—I can see arguments for each word.My two reasons for using “car-less” more than “car-free”: 1. To me, car-free suggests that you don’t drive in cars, while car-less suggests that you just don’t own one. I don’t know if others share those connotations, but that’s what I hear in the words. 2. The Year of Living Dangerously is a great movie, and “The Year of Living Carlessly” is a good play on its title. “The Year of Living Car-free” can’t compete. It’s one syllable short.Which term do others prefer?
MichelleV.P.
Another great movie: “Born Free”Living a conveniently car-free life, myself, I prefer this term 🙂
MichelleV.P.
…And, also “car free” 😉
bottleman
Finish, Alan, I’ve experienced car sharing under both pricing schemes. Car Sharing Portland started out with the per-hour and per-mile scheme. Then they got bought/absorbed by Flexcar. At some point in there they changed to the straight per-hour scheme.(By the way, I don’t think the function of the large deposit in co-op operations is to pay for usage—rather, it’s to capitalize the business, since consumer co-ops must be owned by their clients rather than profit-seeking investors.)As a client the mileage part was always the hardest to figure out. Though technically it should have led to better environmental behavior, sometimes it led to absurdities like waiting in a big traffic jam to avoid the 6-mile-extra way around. I was a bit relieved when they switched to per-hour. Though it was more expensive sometimes, it was much easier to comprehend and predict.I wouldn’t be surprised if the predictability problem affected things from the business POV as well… recordkeeping was complex, and I imagine it’d be hard to predict income. Anyway, in my opinion the mileage charge was great in theory but might not have really made that much difference to total driving in the end.I’m sure pricing schemes are things that car sharing operators talk about among themselves. Maybe the easiest way to find out would be to find people involved and ask them—if their data isn’t too proprietary..bottleworld.net
Seth Zuckerman
Not to rain on the parade of love for car-sharing, but I have rarely found it to be a good solution for my mobility needs—not when compared to a rental car or a taxicab.The problem is that with the per-hour charge, you pay for the car when it’s just sitting at your destination. That makes the pricing model great for running an errand, but not so good if you plan to spend any significant time where you’re going. For many trips within the city, it would be just as cheap and far more flexible to simply take a cab each way. E.g., if you’re going to dinner at a friend’s house, and you’d need 3 hours of car-sharing at $8 per hour, that would amount to the same as a taking a 4.5-mile cab ride each way.For long trips, when the car would spend a long time just waiting at the trailhead or at a friend’s house, it makes more sense to rent a car for the day (and Flexcar recognizes this through its partnership with a car rental agency)Several times, I have seen Flex-car members phone in to try to extend their reservation, only to find that they can’t: the car is already reserved for someone else. They have thus forfeited one of the chief benefits of driving their own vehicle: the ability to travel on their own schedule. (Alternatively, the user can reserve for an even longer period than they expect to need the car….making it less competitive against a cab ride.) With Enterprise offering a standard rate of $33.76 including tax for a full day’s use of a subcompact, all that Flexcar has going for it is its ease of use.
Alan Durning
Seth,Good points! Maybe I don’t have to write a post about car-sharing after all.And your piece in Sierra is GREAT! (Everyone should go read it. Um, I’m rushed and don’t have the link, can someone supply it? It’s the low-carbon diet article.)One thing that’s fascinating to me is that the _existence_ of car-sharing as an option makes possible car-lessness. We actually use FlexCar far less often than we expected to. We also use taxis less than we expected to. What we use more than we expected to is, um, our heads. We plan our way out of a huge number of trips: postpone, rearrange, combine, go online, call first, etc.
bottleman
Seth’s right, as a former frequent car sharer (and renter) I experienced all those issues. However, the price of a standard rental car is often much higher than advertised. You have to pay for gas and they very often convince you to pay for extra insurance (since you don’t own a car, you don’t have car insurance for the rental, and in all the confusion of signing the contract the rental agents can get you bad). It can easily get up to $60 a day after all that. Also (unless you live right next to a rental lot) it is not always that convenient. So I agree, car sharing is not a panacea. But in certain urban situations it is a great resource that keep economic and ecological logic in line.bottleworld.net
Ty
I’ve been following this series with interest. It reminded me of how my mom’s parents had one car for thier entire working lives, and my parents had one car for most of thier pre-children marriage. So much of this discussion about shared vehicles makes me think that every household needs one car to survive; more of us live in suburban environments than live in neighborhoods like Ballard, and there are more of us than there are Seattle residents. Even shifting down to one car would be a massive change for most households that currently have at least two and many times three cars. One car puts the members of the household in the space of actively planning travel and making decisions without cutting off access to some of the great things in our region that are only accessible via private vehicle.
Alan Durning
Ty,Interesting point. For folks who don’t live in compact neighborhoods, simply shedding one vehicle will have some of the same effects as shedding our only vehicle has had for us.
MichelleV.P.
Here’s the link to Seth Zuckerman’s great article, “My Low-Carbon Diet: From Gas Gluttony to Fuel Fitness in Three Weeks,” for SIERRA magazine:http://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/200609/carbon.aspThanks for bringing this up, Alan!And kudos, Seth! The whole nation, and indeed the world, would benefit from indulging in this low-carbon diet. The more the merrier. Cheers!
Julia
Tuning in way late – thanks for a great reflection. Back on car-less vs. car-free: I vastly prefer car-free, because car-less to me connotes some lack. I don’t feel deprived in the least not having a car – in fact, I am grateful to be liberated from all the costs and maintenance associated with owning a car, and all the stress involved in driving around town. I do ride in other people’s cars sometimes and I very occasionally rent or borrow one – but I am so much happier traveling by foot, bike, or bus, and taking fewer trips that weren’t really necessary anyway.
Scott
I’m wondering to what extent the carfree lifestyle diverts decision avoidance rather than reducing it.I fully agree that owning a car leads to more car-oriented solutions, whether they are really more efficient or not. But I also wonder, in my own carfee life, how often not having a car simply cuts down on the trips that I make. This is a good thing in many ways. I consume fewer impulse items and replace purchases with home-made DIY solutions. However, I may also decide not to attend some party or event, or put off running errands and other travel-related chores. This happens for the same reason car owners drive; it’s easier.It would be interesting to find out how much of the 10% driving reduction due to travel smart is trip reduction vs. mode shift. I imagine that some portion of that decision avoidance is transferred from driving to non-participation.
waxner
The reasons for being car free range from concern about energy use and pollution to financial concerns including the rising price of gasoline. There are so many things we do because it’s available to us and, as humans, we’re not good at putting restrictions on our own activities. Not having a car is one way of having an extra boundary put on your lives that makes you live better
mark
I just discovered this website, and am really enjoying this series of articles on a year of carless living. This article in particular strikes me, because it’s something that I’ve experienced to a lesser extent. I plan to sell my car in the spring, since I don’t really want my first carless months to be a Denver winter.
However, I cancelled my parking at my apartment building, now my car is usually anywhere from 3 to 10 blocks away from my home. I bought gas yesterday, the last time I’d bought any before that? Mid September. This is more than double the usual amount of time I can go without gas. Just that minor inconvenience added to driving has made a huge change, because I consider my options…