Measuring Mobility Gaps: A Quantitative Study of Affordability, Reliability and Safety Issues in Kathmandu's Public Transport System

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/nprcjmr.v2i6.81040

Keywords:

Public transport, Kathmandu Valley, affordability, reliability, safety, accessibility, sustainable mobility, Nepal

Abstract

Background: Public transport is the primary mobility source in Nepal's cities, particularly the densely populated Kathmandu Valley. Despite its importance, the system is plagued with long-standing affordability, dependability, safety, and accessibility problems with disproportionate effects on marginalized groups. Route No. 5 is one such systemic example reflective of broader national issues in public transport.

Objectives: The current study aimed to (1) assess commuter attitudes towards quality of service, (2) examine socioeconomic disparities in transport access, (3) identify key service gaps, (4) suggest evidence-based policy measures, and (5) contribute to sustainable urban mobility with Nepal's development agenda.

Methods: Quantitative survey of 141 Route No. 5 commuters using a structured questionnaire was conducted. Data on affordability, reliability, safety, and accessibility were obtained through face-to-face interviews and analyzed using SPSS (descriptive statistics, cross-tabulations). Cronbach's alpha (α > 0.7) was used to establish reliability. Findings: The findings were: Affordability: 63.8% thought fares were affordable, but 28.4% (mostly students and low-income groups) had financial burdens (Table 2). Reliability: 34.8% perceived services as unreliable, including peak-hour delays and overloading (Table 3).

Safety: 27% felt unsafe in the evening, with women citing harassment (Table 4). Accessibility: 43.3% reported limited evening services; 72% cited inadequate disability infrastructure (Table 5)

Conclusion: The study reveals urgent needs for fare subsidies, improved frequency of services, more nighttime safety measures (e.g., CCTV, women-only transport), and disability-accessible infrastructure. Policy reforms must give precedence to equitable access and enforcement of service standards.

Novelty: The paper presents empirical, route-level data to fill Nepal's public transport gaps, linking micro-level commuter experience to macro-level policy solutions.

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Author Biographies

Asmita Basnet, Atharva Business College

Research Scholar

Sneha Shrestha, Atharva Business College

Research Scholar

Suraj Kurungwang Limbu, Atharva Business College

Research Scholar

Shraddha Shrestha, Atharva Business College

Research Scholar

Badri Tamang, Mahendra Multiple Campus, Dharan

Assistance Professor

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Published

2025-06-30

How to Cite

Basnet, A., Shrestha, S., Limbu, S. K., Shrestha, S., & Tamang, B. (2025). Measuring Mobility Gaps: A Quantitative Study of Affordability, Reliability and Safety Issues in Kathmandu’s Public Transport System. NPRC Journal of Multidisciplinary Research, 2(6), 254–262. https://doi.org/10.3126/nprcjmr.v2i6.81040

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