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Competition and Quality: Evidence from High-Speed Railways and Airlines

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2025 107(2), 494-509
Abstract The entry of High-Speed Railways (HSR) represents disruptive competition to airlines. Utilizing a unique dataset of all flights departing from Beijing to 113 domestic destinations in China since January 2009, we employ a difference-in-differences approach to examine the effects of HSR entry on on-time performance and to identify the channels. We document two main findings. First, the entry of HSR leads to significant reductions in the mean and variance of travel delays on the affected airline routes. Second, the reductions in departure delays and taxi-in times at the destination airports are identified as the main channels.

Information Provision and Search Frictions: Evidence from the Taxi Industry in Singapore

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2025
Abstract Search frictions and misallocation are common in decentralized transportation markets. Using novel trip-level data of taxis in Singapore, this paper examines the impactof real-time demand information at airport terminals on search frictions. The in-formation reduces taxi supply misallocation, increasing deadheading speed by 16.3%and decreasing deadheading time by 10.77%, benefiting both passengers and drivers.It raises daily earnings by $3.70 USD and adds 6.2 minutes of operational time perairport-trip taxi. Spatial spillovers are primarily observed among drivers in adjacentdistricts. Taxis from the Budget Terminal and drivers with fewer prior airport pickups benefit more from this information.