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Review Article

The equity impacts of bus rapid transit: A review of the evidence and implications for sustainable transport

, , &
Pages 140-152
Received 30 Sep 2016
Accepted 06 Jun 2017
Accepted author version posted online: 14 Jun 2017
Published online: 05 Jul 2017
 

ABSTRACT

The paper offers an analysis of empirical evidence on the equity impacts of operational Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) systems in the Global South. The focus is on vertical equity, i.e. whether BRT systems achieve progressive benefits for poorer segments of the population. Findings from Africa, Asia, and Latin America all suggest that BRT does offer significant benefits to low-income groups, in terms of travel time and cost savings, access enhancement, and safety and health benefits. However benefits are often skewed toward medium-income users and thus less progressive than they might be. Two primary reasons for this are insufficient spatial coverage and inappropriate fare policies. While many features of BRT potentially allow it to deliver pro-poor outcomes, such outcomes only materialize if BRT implementers pay specific and sustained attention to equity. The paper identifies key issues that need to be addressed to steer BRT implementation toward more socially sustainable outcomes—including better integration with other transit, paratransit, and nonmotorized transport services, and with the housing sector.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful for the help of colleagues who supplied literature and critical thoughts, and for the helpful comments of four anonymous reviewers. An earlier version of the paper was presented at the 13th World Conference on Transport Research (WCTR) in Rio de Janeiro.

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