Understanding the mediator role of satisfaction in public transport: A cross-country analysis
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Oña López, Juan José DeEditorial
Elsevier
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Juan de Oña (2021) Understanding the mediator role of satisfaction in public transport: a cross-country analysis. Transport Policy, 100, 129-149 [doi: 10.1016/j.tranpol.2020.09.011]
Patrocinador
Spain’s Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Research Project TRA2015-66235-R).Résumé
Many studies have analyzed the relationship between service quality, satisfaction and behavioral intentions or
loyalty in the field of public transport. Yet despite growing interest, there is a lack of consensus regarding a
number of aspects, e.g.: the difference between service quality and satisfaction, between behavioral intentions
and loyalty, or the mediating effect of satisfaction between service quality and behavioral intentions. The main
objective of this article is to shed light on the type of mediator effect exerted by satisfaction between service
quality and behavioral intentions or loyalty in the area of urban and metropolitan public transport. To this end,
structural equation modeling (SEM) is used to compare two competitive models, one in which satisfaction plays a
partial mediating role (i.e. service quality presents direct and indirect effects on behavioral intentions or loyalty),
and another where satisfaction exerts a complete or full mediator effect (i.e., service quality presents only indirect
effects). The comparison is based on data from a single (translated) survey of public transport users in five
European cities: Madrid, Rome, Berlin, Lisbon and London. The results support the superiority of the full
mediator model over the partial mediator one in the urban and metropolitan public transport sector. The use of
five independent samples made it possible replicate results and generalize conclusions, as well as identify other
methodological and practical aspects. From a methodological standpoint, this paper confirmed the need to
consider service quality and satisfaction as different factors and to compare alternative models with different
samples when applying SEM to the public transport field. From a practical standpoint, the results suggest that
service quality, associated with specific attributes of service, exerts a total effect on behavioral intentions or
loyalty, superior to the effect of satisfaction, a finding that has important implications for transport operators.
Finally, this study confirms that in large cities, the intermodality of public transport is one of the attributes that
contributes most to the appraisal of its service quality, together with frequency, punctuality and speed.