How (in)accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects? The case of transportation.

his article presents results from the first statistically significant study of traffic forecasts in transportation infrastructure projects. The sample used is the largest of its kind, covering 210 projects in 14 nations worth U.S.$59 billion. The study shows with very high statistical significance t...

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मुख्य लेखकों: Flyvbjerg, B, Holm, M, Buhl, S
स्वरूप: Journal article
प्रकाशित: 2005
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author Flyvbjerg, B
Holm, M
Buhl, S
author_facet Flyvbjerg, B
Holm, M
Buhl, S
author_sort Flyvbjerg, B
collection OXFORD
description his article presents results from the first statistically significant study of traffic forecasts in transportation infrastructure projects. The sample used is the largest of its kind, covering 210 projects in 14 nations worth U.S.$59 billion. The study shows with very high statistical significance that forecasters generally do a poor job of estimating the demand for transportation infrastructure projects. For 9 out of 10 rail projects, passenger forecasts are overestimated; the average overestima-tion is 106%. For half of all road projects, the difference between actual and forecasted traffic is more than ±20%. The result is substantial financial risks, which are typically ignored or downplayed by planners and decision makers to the detriment of social and economic welfare. Our data also show that forecasts have not become more accurate over the 30-year period studied, despite claims to the contrary by forecasters. The causes of inaccuracy in forecasts are different for rail and road projects, with political causes playing a larger role for rail than for road. The cure is transparency, accountability, and new forecasting methods. The challenge is to change the governance structures for forecasting and project development. Our article shows how planners may help achieve this.
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spelling oxford-uuid:f532e7af-2a92-40ba-bc6d-9334beccca8f2022-03-27T12:25:34ZHow (in)accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects? The case of transportation. Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:f532e7af-2a92-40ba-bc6d-9334beccca8fSaïd Business School - Eureka2005Flyvbjerg, BHolm, MBuhl, Shis article presents results from the first statistically significant study of traffic forecasts in transportation infrastructure projects. The sample used is the largest of its kind, covering 210 projects in 14 nations worth U.S.$59 billion. The study shows with very high statistical significance that forecasters generally do a poor job of estimating the demand for transportation infrastructure projects. For 9 out of 10 rail projects, passenger forecasts are overestimated; the average overestima-tion is 106%. For half of all road projects, the difference between actual and forecasted traffic is more than ±20%. The result is substantial financial risks, which are typically ignored or downplayed by planners and decision makers to the detriment of social and economic welfare. Our data also show that forecasts have not become more accurate over the 30-year period studied, despite claims to the contrary by forecasters. The causes of inaccuracy in forecasts are different for rail and road projects, with political causes playing a larger role for rail than for road. The cure is transparency, accountability, and new forecasting methods. The challenge is to change the governance structures for forecasting and project development. Our article shows how planners may help achieve this.
spellingShingle Flyvbjerg, B
Holm, M
Buhl, S
How (in)accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects? The case of transportation.
title How (in)accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects? The case of transportation.
title_full How (in)accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects? The case of transportation.
title_fullStr How (in)accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects? The case of transportation.
title_full_unstemmed How (in)accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects? The case of transportation.
title_short How (in)accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects? The case of transportation.
title_sort how in accurate are demand forecasts in public works projects the case of transportation
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AT holmm howinaccuratearedemandforecastsinpublicworksprojectsthecaseoftransportation
AT buhls howinaccuratearedemandforecastsinpublicworksprojectsthecaseoftransportation