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Demographic and regional economic modeling using stochastic allocation in the City of Johannesburg

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dc.contributor.author Lamprecht, TJ
dc.contributor.author Venter, CJ
dc.contributor.author Badenhorst, W
dc.date.accessioned 2007-07-03T09:05:37Z
dc.date.available 2007-07-03T09:05:37Z
dc.date.issued 2005-11
dc.identifier.citation Lamprecht, TJ, Venter, CJ and Badenhorst, W. 2005. Demographic and regional economic modeling using stochastic allocation in the City of Johannesburg. TRB 85th Annual Meeting, Pages: 10 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/864
dc.description.abstract The paper describes a method for the modelling of demographic and economic change at a spatially disaggregate level that is compatible with the requirements of a conventional transport model. The method was developed and tested in the City of Johannesburg, South Africa, as part of a scenario planning exercise to assess potential land use and transport interventions. The procedure does not model behavioural processes explicitly, but incorporates the factors believed to influence the development of residential and non-residential land uses in a multi-criteria analysis framework, within the constraints of land availability and the guiding effects of government policy. Allocation occurs in discrete time-steps, allowing the dynamic evolution of outcomes to be modelled in a non-equilibrium framework. It operates in connected mode with the transport model, taking accessibility changes as input into subsequent land use allocations. It employs Monte Carlo simulation to approximate randomness in the location decision outcome, thus providing some sense of the variability of outcomes that may occur consistent with base year conditions, regional growth estimates, and a set of allocation criteria. The method is illustrated for the City of Johannesburg over a thirty-year planning horizon, and its particular strengths for application in a developing society are discussed. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Demographic modeling en
dc.subject Economic modeling en
dc.subject Stochastic allocation en
dc.title Demographic and regional economic modeling using stochastic allocation in the City of Johannesburg en
dc.type Article en
dc.identifier.apacitation Lamprecht, T., Venter, C., & Badenhorst, W. (2005). Demographic and regional economic modeling using stochastic allocation in the City of Johannesburg. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/864 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Lamprecht, TJ, CJ Venter, and W Badenhorst "Demographic and regional economic modeling using stochastic allocation in the City of Johannesburg." (2005) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/864 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Lamprecht T, Venter C, Badenhorst W. Demographic and regional economic modeling using stochastic allocation in the City of Johannesburg. 2005; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/864. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Lamprecht, TJ AU - Venter, CJ AU - Badenhorst, W AB - The paper describes a method for the modelling of demographic and economic change at a spatially disaggregate level that is compatible with the requirements of a conventional transport model. The method was developed and tested in the City of Johannesburg, South Africa, as part of a scenario planning exercise to assess potential land use and transport interventions. The procedure does not model behavioural processes explicitly, but incorporates the factors believed to influence the development of residential and non-residential land uses in a multi-criteria analysis framework, within the constraints of land availability and the guiding effects of government policy. Allocation occurs in discrete time-steps, allowing the dynamic evolution of outcomes to be modelled in a non-equilibrium framework. It operates in connected mode with the transport model, taking accessibility changes as input into subsequent land use allocations. It employs Monte Carlo simulation to approximate randomness in the location decision outcome, thus providing some sense of the variability of outcomes that may occur consistent with base year conditions, regional growth estimates, and a set of allocation criteria. The method is illustrated for the City of Johannesburg over a thirty-year planning horizon, and its particular strengths for application in a developing society are discussed. DA - 2005-11 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Demographic modeling KW - Economic modeling KW - Stochastic allocation LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2005 T1 - Demographic and regional economic modeling using stochastic allocation in the City of Johannesburg TI - Demographic and regional economic modeling using stochastic allocation in the City of Johannesburg UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/864 ER - en_ZA


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