de Grange, LouisTroncoso, RodrigoBriones, Ignacio2019-08-132019-08-132018Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice Volume 108, February 2018, Pages 1-11http://hdl.handle.net/11447/2574doi.org/10.1016/j.tra.2017.12.007The aggregate cost structure of the Santiago (Chile) urban bus transport industry is studied for the presence of economies of scale, return to scale and technical efficiency. Econometric models using both operator cost and revenue (fares plus subsidy) data show that larger operators under Transantiago had higher average operating costs than the smaller ones; we obtain a similar conclusion when analysing production and the efficiency of firms: we estimate decreasing returns to scale in production, and that larger operators would be more inefficient than smaller operators. The model results also indicate that cost per passenger carried for longer, articulated buses is greater than for shorter, conventional vehicles. These findings are important considerations for the design of the industry and its regulatory framework.enBus industryDiseconomies of scaleReturns to scaleTechnical efficiencyTransantiagoChileCost, production and efficiency in local bus industry: An empirical analysis for the bus system of SantiagoArtículo